Oregon State University Bulletin Please note Admitted students receive a copy of the OSU General Catalog when they first enroll. The Catalog may also be purchased for $4 per copy from the OSU Book Store or the Registrar's Office. The OSU Graduate Catalog is available free to prospective graduate students from the Graduate School Office. It may also be purchased for $3 per copy from the OSU Book Store. Other Sources of information about Oregon State University include the Summer Term Bulletin, distributed by the Summer Term Office; and the General Information Packet, available through the Office of Admissions. All of these bulletins are free. The address for all campus offices: Oregon State University Corvallis, Oregon 97331 University Information, call: (503) 737-0123 or 737-1000 Admission Information, call: (503) 737-4411 Oregon State University Bulletin (USPS 411-520) Number 236 Spring 1993 Published six times a year (one issue each in winter and autumn; two issues each in spring and summer) by the Oregon State System of Higher Education at Oregon State University, Office of University Publications, Waldo Hall 101, Corvallis, Oregon 973316407. Second class postage paid at Corvallis, Oregon. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Oregon State University Bulletin, Office of University Publications, 101 Waldo Hall, Corvallis, Oregon 97331-6407. Catalog Coordinator: Madge Patterson Designer: Liz Kingslien Layout/Assistant Editor: Marie Oliver Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of information in the General Catalog. However, Oregon State University or the Oregon State Board of Higher Education may find it necessary from time to time to make changes in courses, curricula, or degree requirements. Students already admitted to a program in which such changes have been made will be reasonably accommodated, if possible, to ensure their normal progress for a degree. A student may, however, still be required to conform to changes in courses, curricula, or degree requirements as deemed necessary by Oregon State University or the State Board of Higher Education. © Oregon State University, 1993 Welcome to Oregon State University tudents are our most important asset at Oregon State. We start with some of the best and make them better. From the time you first enroll, Oregon State's effort is directed toward making your college career successful and rewarding. Oregon State University is known worldwide for the excellence of its programs and the quality of its people. Excellence and quality represent our dedication to provide the best possible education to every student, to expand knowledge through research, and to assist the people of Oregon through a commitment to service. OSU provides its students with an exciting and challenging atmosphere in which education and research occur side by side and complement each other. Through a dedicated and highly regarded faculty, a well-equipped library, exceptional S research facilities, a variety of special educational opportunities, and a wide range of extracurricular activities, OSU encourages students to develop as individuals and as knowledgeable participants in a democratic society. That Oregon State is successful in these efforts is demonstrated by the large number of OSU graduates holding leadership positions in business, government, and the professions. Among OSU's outstanding graduates is Linus Pauling, the only person ever to win two individual Nobel prizes in different categories. Pauling recently named OSU as the repository for his papers and medals. In addition, Oregon's most recent Rhodes Scholar is an OSU graduate. Employers recognize the value of an Oregon State University education, and each year more of them make recruiting visits to OSU than any other school in the state. The Career Planning and Placement Center receives and posts notices of more than 20,000 job vacancies annually. And when Oregon State graduates are hired to fill those vacancies, the employers know they are getting the best. For example, our engineering graduates traditionally score among the highest in the nation on the examination required for licensing in their profession. During each of the past three years, the passing rate for OSU grads has been 96 percent or better. OSU's highly regarded accounting program is one of only 61 accredited programs in the nation. In a recent year, OSU accounting graduates ranked first in the nation in passing the Uniform CPA Examination. Graduates of about 1,000 schools take the test. -:-M1Iur p p A recent study ranked the OSU College of Forestry as the first of its kind in the nation. The facilities and research forests at OSU are unmatched by those in any other state. These examples aren't the exception. In one instance after another, Oregon State and our students are among the best anywhere. YOU HAVE A CHOICE Whatever your educational and career goals, there is a strong chance that Oregon State University has a program that's right for you. Students at OSU have the opportunity to choose from about 10,000 courses. The University offers nearly 200 different undergraduate programs and more than 95 graduate degrees. The University's many programs also include preprofessional preparation in dental hygiene, dentistry, medical technology, medicine, nursing, occupational therapy, optometry, physical therapy, podiatry, and veterinary medicine. That variety doesn't come at the expense of individuality or quality, however. Most OSU classes have fewer than 30 students, allowing students and faculty members to get to know each other and work more closely together. And even the larger classes generally have small lab or discussion sessions to increase learning opportunities. Welcome Students who have demonstrated superior scholastic ability and can benefit from a degree of extra challenge may participate in honors courses. Through special colloquia, seminars, and research projects, students have an opportunity to increase their awareness and understanding by carefully examining and analyzing selected issues and themes. The world becomes part of the OSU campus through various foreign study programs that allow students to earn regular University academic credit while studying overseas. OSU students participate in programs in Australia, China, Denmark, Ecuador, England, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Japan, Korea, New Zealand, Scotland, and the Commonwealth of Independent States. Study abroad programs generally range from one term to a full year. Even students who choose not to study in another country have the opportunity to learn about other peoples and other cultures because about 10 percent of the University's students come from other countries. OSU students who would like to study in another part of the United States have an opportunity to do that. Through National Student Exchange, students can spend up to a year at one of more than 70 colleges and universities in 39 states and continue to earn regular academic credit toward their OSU degree. The Army, Navy, and Air Force offer ROTC programs on the OSU campus for men and women who want to serve as commissioned officers in the armed forces after graduation. Scholarships are available through the programs, and participants are paid during the final two years. OSU is the only school in the state with all three services represented in its ROTC programs. OSU's Experimental College offers noncredit, nongraded courses on a wide variety of topics. More than 200 courses are listed in the Experimental College catalog and more than 2,000 people enroll in the courses each term. Examples of topics recently offered are aerobics, beer making, cooking, massage, and yoga. WHEN YOU NEED HELP Every student at OSU has an academic adviser to help plan a course of study suited to his or her academic and career goals and to provide general assistance and support throughout the student's stay at OSU. To get new students started on the right track, Oregon State offers special orientation programs for freshmen and transfer students. Summer advising sessions are held for incoming freshmen to allow them to become familiar with the campus and register for classes. Fall term transfer students and new freshmen who didn't participate in the summer program attend an orientation session just before the start of school. Orientation programs also are available at the start of winter and spring terms. In addition, freshman and transfer orientation classes that meet throughout the first term have proved successful in helping new students make the sometimes difficult transition from high school to college or from one college to another. Students who need additional help to ensure their success at OSU are encouraged to take advantage of programs such as Educational Opportunities and Exploratory Studies. The Educational Opportunities Program offers assistance to minority students and others who traditionally have been denied equal access to academic opportunities. The program helps students who have the potential for success in college even though in some cases they may not meet regular OSU admission requirements. University Exploratory Studies is a program providing special counseling to students who want help in choosing an appropriate major area of study and making career plans. For students who need financial assistance, many scholarships, grants, loans, and work-study jobs are available through the OSU Office of Financial Aid. The office also helps students find on-campus and off-campus jobs. During the past year, some 9,500 Oregon State students received more than $22 million in various forms of assistance to help them pay for their college education. IT'S NOT ALL WORK When students need time away from classes and studies, the OSU campus and the surrounding area provide an almost limitless choice of opportunities. At OSU there are nearly 350 recognized clubs and organizations, for example. Most students choose to be involved in at least two or three activities while at Oregon State. The groups range from social and athletic clubs to academic and honor societies. Included are such areas as drama, student government, and student-run publications, radio, and television stations. OSU students have many recreational opportunities. Intercollegiate and intramural athletics are popular, and most OSU students take advantage of the University's recreational facilities for exercise or for informal sports such as swimming, tennis, weightlifting, running, and racquetball. The Memorial Union offers a place to gather between or after classes and have a snack, study, visit with friends, watch television, or just sit back and take it easy. In the evenings and on weekends, OSU offers a wide range of intercollegiate athletic events and cultural and social activities, such as lectures, concerts, recitals, dances, and special campus events. General Information THE UNIVERSITY Oregon State University provides diverse educational opportunities through the undergraduate and graduate programs of its 11 colleges and one school. The University is typified by a variety of academic choices which include studies in scientific, technological, interdisciplinary, and professional as well as liberal arts fields. A Land Grant, Sea Grant, and Space Grant university with beginnings in the 1850s, OSU is now home for nearly 15,000 undergraduate and graduate students, representing about 90 countries and every state in the nation. In addition to its regular educational programs, the University conducts extensive research programs, administers the Extension Service in all Oregon counties, and maintains branch agricultural stations at several locations throughout the state. Further research is done by the University at Yaquina Bay in Newport, where the OSU Mark O. Hatfield Marine Science Center is located. Kj Through research, Oregon State extends the frontiers of knowledge in the sciences, liberal arts, and in all aspects of natural, human, and economic resources. Oregon State contributes to the intellectual development and the economic and technological advancement of humankind. As a Land Grant, Sea Grant, and Space Grant university, Oregon State has a special responsibility for education and research enabling the people of Oregon and the world to develop and utilize human, land, atmospheric, and oceanic resources. Unique programs of public service throughout Oregon supplement campus-based University teaching and research. GUIDELINES The highest aspiration of a university is to free people's minds from ignorance, prejudice, and provincialism and to stimulate a lasting attitude of inquiry. Oregon State Oregon State University's basic goal is to create a better academic environment for the intellectual and humane development of the men and women of the Oregon State academic community and to maintain OSU as a center in which the freedoms to think, to learn, to relate, to experiment, and to develop standards of criticism and excellence are encouraged. ACCREDITATION Oregon State University is accredited by the Northwest Association of Schools and Colleges. The departments of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering are approved by the American Chemical Society. The College of Business is accredited by the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business. The School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education for preparation of elementary and secondary teachers and GUIDING PRINCIPLES Students are our most important clients. The quality and completeness of their education is our top priority. We have the responsibility to students, staff, and faculty to help them grow personally and professionally. We have a responsibility to society to contribute to its social, aesthetic, and economic well-being. Our social responsibility extends to offer- ing informed criticism even when that criticism may not be well received, and we maintain an internal environment that will nurture this important contribution. Flexibility, change, and constant improvement are essential to our continued success. In instruction, research, and service activities, we honor and impart principles of academic honesty, freedom, and integrity. Diversity is a key to our success. Not only are our doors open to men and women alike without regard to race, ethnicity, personal belief, disability, or sexual preference; we also have a moral obligation to open the doors wider for any groups that are underrepresented or that have suffered from discrimination. MISSION Oregon State University serves the people of Oregon, the nation, and the world through education, research, and service. Oregon State extends its programs throughout the world and is committed to providing access and educational opportunities to minorities and to challenged and disadvantaged students. Oregon State has an inherent commitment to provide a comprehensive array of high quality educational programs in the sciences, liberal arts, and selected professions. The University encourages students, both on and off campus, to develop an enriched awareness of themselves and their global environment. University shares this aspiration with universities everywhere. Accordingly, Oregon State University accepts the charge of the State Board of Higher Education that it provide a general education for its students so "that they will acquire the knowledge, skills, and wisdom for (a) personal development and enrichment, particularly through arts and letters; (b) responsible participation in a democratic society; (c) an understanding of the scientific methodology which has wrought a revolution in the ways of knowing and the extent and application of knowledge; and (d) an understanding of other cultures and natures as well as our own." guidance counselors. Eight curricula in the College of Engineering are accredited by the Engineering Accreditation Commission of the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology; one curriculum is accredited by the American Council on Construction Education. The College of Forestry is accredited by the Society of American Foresters. The College of Home Economics is accredited by the Council for Professional Development of the American Home Economics Association. The Department of Music is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Music. The College of Pharmacy is accredited by the American Council for Pharmaceutical Education, and the College of Veterinary Medicine by the American Veterinary Medical Council on Education. General Information HISTORY From its first days as a small private college 132 years ago, Oregon State University has developed into the major research and teaching institution it is today. OSU's roots go back to 1858, with the founding of an academy incorporated as Corvallis College. College-level courses were introduced into the curriculum about 1865, and two men and one woman fulfilled the requirements for baccalaureate degrees in 1870, becoming the first graduates of a state-assisted college in the western United States. State aid to higher education in Oregon started on October 27, 1868, when Corvallis College was designated as "the agricultural college of the State of Oregon." In its early days, Corvallis College was maintained by the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, and was only partly statesupported. The state assumed complete control in 1885. With that assumption of control, the college became known as Oregon Agricultural College. The name was changed to Oregon State College in the 1920s and Oregon State University on March 6, 1961. In designating Corvallis College as Oregon's agricultural institution, the state legislature accepted the provisions of the Morrill Act, signed into law by President Lincoln on July 2, 1862. The act provided grants of land to be used by states for the sole purpose of endowing, supporting, and maintaining publicly controlled colleges. Following designation of the college as a land grant institution, agriculture was added to the existing arts and science curriculum in 1869. The curriculum continued to expand, with professorships in commerce (1880), agriculture (1883), household economy (1889), and engineering (1889) resulting in the establishment in 1908 of the professional schools of commerce, agriculture, home economics, and engineering. The first summer session also was held in 1908. Curricular growth continued with the schools of forestry (1913), mines (1913), pharmacy (1917), education (1918), basic arts and sciences (1922), and health and physical education (1931). In 1932, the State Board of Higher Education established the School of Science for the state system at Corvallis, eliminated the School of Mines, and reduced the School of Health and Physical Education to a division. Major work in business administration was discontinued but was reinstated when the College of Business was established (first as a division) in 1943. The College of Liberal Arts was established (as the School of Humanities and Social Sciences) in 1959, and the College of Oceanography was created (as a school) in 1972. The College of Health and Physical Education was reinstated (as a school) in 1974, and the College of Veterinary Medicine was established (as a school) the following year. In 1983, all schools of the University, except the School of Education, were redesignated as colleges. In 1989, the School of Education became a college. Presidents of the institution since its founding are W. A. Finley, 1865-72; B. L. Arnold, 1872-92; John M. Bloss, 1892-96; H. B. Miller, 1896-97; Thomas M. Gatch, 18971907; William Jasper Kerr, 1907-32; George Wilcox Peavy, 1934-40; Llewellyn Ballard, 1940-41; Francois Archibald Gilfillan, 194142; August Leroy Strand, 1942-61; James Herbert Jensen, 1961-69; Roy Alton Young, 1969-70; Robert William MacVicar, 19701984; John V. Byrne, 1984-present. Table of Contents WELCOME 1 GENERAL INFORMATION 3 A GUIDE TO READING THE CATALOG CALENDARS FOR 1993-94 6 8 9 ADMISSION TO OREGON STATE EARNING'A DEGREE AT OREGON STATE The Baccalaureate Core MAJORS, MINORS, CERTIFICATES FEES, DEPOSITS, RESIDENCY 16 20 GRADES, REGULATIONS, AND RECORDS FINANCIAL AID 26 SCHOLARSHIPS 29 HOUSING 13 14 24 45 COUNSELING AND ADVISING 47 SUPPORT SERVICES 48 SUMMER SESSION AND CONTINUING HIGHER EDUCATION 53 INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION 54 MU PROGRAMS AND STUDENT ACTIVITIES STUDENT AFFAIRS 57 LIBRARY, MUSEUMS, GALLERIES, COLLECTIONS 59 ALUMNI AND UNIVERSITY RELATIONS COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS American Studies Anthropology 67 67 Art 71 Economics 73 English 76 Foreign Languages and Literatures History 85 The History of Science 87 Human Services 87 Latin American Affairs 87 Liberal Studies 88 Music 88 Peace Studies 92 Philosophy 93 Political Science 95 Psychology 87 Russian Studies 99 Scientific and Technical Communication 99 Sociology 100 Speech Communication 102 Twentieth-Century Studies 105 Women Studies 106 108 Biochemistry and Biophysics COLLEGE OF SCIENCE Biology 62 64 110 111 Botany and Plant Pathology Chemistry 115 Entomology 117 General Science 119 Genetics 121 Geosciences 122 113 79 56 Geography 122 Geology 123 History of Science 127 Mathematics 127 Meteorology 131 Microbiology 132 Molecular and Cellular Biology 133 Physics 134 Preprofessional Programs in the Health Sciences 137 Dental Hygiene 137 Dentistry 137 Medical Technology 137 Medicine and Osteopathy 138 Premedical Program 138 Nursing 138 Occupational Therapy 139 Optometry 139 Physical Therapy 139 Podiatry 140 Veterinary Medicine 140 Science and Mathematics Education 141 Statistics 142 Zoology 144 INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES 146 Bioresource Research 148 Environmental Sciences 150 Natural Resources 151 International Degree 152 Other Interdisciplinary Programs 154 COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES 156 Agricultural and Resource Economics 158 Agricultural Chemistry 161 Agricultural Education and General Agriculture 162 Animal Sciences 163 Bioresource Research 166 Crop and Soil Science 166 Extension Service 169 Fisheries and Wildlife 170 Food Science and Technology 173 Horticulture 175 Rangeland Resources 177 COLLEGE OF BUSINESS 180 Business Administration 182 Accounting and Information Management 183 Finance and International Business 183 Management and Marketing 184 COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING 188 Engineering Science 190 Bioresource Engineering 191 Chemical Engineering 192 Civil Engineering 194 Civil Engineering-Forest Engineering 197 Construction Engineering Management 197 Computer Science 198 Electrical and Computer Engineering 200 Engineering Physics 203 General Engineering 204 Geological Engineering 204 Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering 204 Mechanical Engineering 206 Metallurgical Engineering 208 Mining Engineering 208 Nuclear Engineering 208 Radiation Health 210 COLLEGE OF FORESTRY 212 Forest Engineering 214 Forest Products 216 Forest Resources 218 Forest Management 218 Forest Science 222 COLLEGE OF HEALTH AND HUMAN PERFORMANCE 224 Health Education 226 Exercise and Sport Science 227 Physical Education 227 Physical Activity Education 230 Public Health 233 COLLEGE OF HOME ECONOMICS AND EDUCATION 240 Apparel, Interiors, and Merchandising 242 Human Development and Family Studies 246 Nutrition and Food Management 250 GRADUATE PROGRAMS IN EDUCATION 253 Teacher Education 253 Standard Licensure 254 Adult Education Programs 254 Community College Education 255 Doctor of Philosophy Program 255 College Student Services Administration 259 Counselor Education 260 COLLEGE OF OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES 262 Biological Oceanography 265 Chemical Oceanography 266 Geological Oceanography 267 Physical Oceanography 267 Geophysics 268 Marine Resource Management 268 Atmospheric Sciences 269 COLLEGE OF PHARMACY 270 Medicinal Chemistry 273 Pharmacology and Toxicology 274 Pharmacy Practice 274 COLLEGE OF VETERINARY MEDICINE 276 RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS 282 Aerospace Studies 283 Military Science 285 Naval Science 286 GRADUATE SCHOOL 288 296 RESEARCH SUMMARY OF ENROLLMENT AND DEGREES 305 FACULTY 306 CAMPUS MAP 348 INDEX 349 0 A Guide to Reading the Catalog ORGANIZATION OF THE UNIVERSITY The President is the chief executive officer of the University, appointed by the Oregon DEFINITIONS The following terms are used throughout the catalog or by advisers. State Board of Higher Education, and Adviser-A faculty member appointed by responsible for the overall leadership and direction of the University. The Provost and Executive Vice President is the chief academic and operating officer and is responsible for the daily operations of the University. The academic programs of Oregon State University are divided among eleven colleges, one school and the Graduate School, each with a dean or director responsible for all faculty, staff, students, and programs. The eleven colleges are the College of the department or college to advise students through their college experience Agricultural Sciences, College of Business, College of Engineering, College of Forestry, College of Health and Human Performance, College of Home Economics and Education, College of Liberal Arts, College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences, College of Pharmacy, College of Science, and the College of Veterinary Medicine. Colleges are divided into departments administered by a department head or chair. Each department may offer several programs of study leading to degrees, certificates, options, or minors requiring a specific group of courses for completion. Some courses and programs described in the General Catalog are offered throughout the year (at a variety of sites) by the Oregon State University Office of Continuing Higher Education. A list of currently offered courses is available from that office. In addition, Summer Term is directed by the Office of Continuing Higher Education. Courses offered during Summer Term are published each year in the Summer Term Bulletin. This catalog lists requirements for each program, as well as all regular courses offered by Oregon State University. A number of special temporary or "X" courses are also offered each year and are listed in the Schedule of Classes. The Graduate Catalog describes the requirements for graduate degrees, and policies that pertain to graduate students and their individual programs. A summary is provided in the General Catalog. Electives-Courses that students may select, either for general knowledge or for fulfilling specific degree requirements. Grade Point Average-Total number of grade points received for grades divided by total number of credits attempted. A 4 point grade scale is used at OSU. BA Degree-The Bachelor of Arts is conferred for broad and liberal education in humanities, arts, social sciences, and sciences. College BA requirements provide a) a breadth of preparation in these fields that is significantly greater than that required of all undergraduates through the Baccalaureate Core; and b) foreign language proficiency certified by the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures as equivalent to that attained at the end of the second year course in the language. Graduate Area of Concentration-Subdivision of a major or minor in which a strong BS Degree-The Bachelor of Science degree is conferred for focused curricula that emphasize scientific ways of knowing and quantitative approaches to understanding in the sciences and social sciences, and for curricula in professional fields. Interdisciplinary-A term that refers to a Baccalaureate Core-The University's general education requirements. Blanket Numbered Courses-Reserved number courses such as 401/501/601. See Reserved Number Course. Certificate Program (Undergraduate)-A specified interdisciplinary program of study leading to an official certificate and notation on the transcript. A certificate program draws from more than one department, rather than a single department (as with minors). The certificate program must be taken in conjunction with a formal degree program. Course-An organized unit of instruction or research. Types include lectures, recitations, laboratories, discussions, internships, clerkships, reading and conference, independent study, and other categories of courses. Credit-Credits vary, depending upon the type of course and level at which it is offered. One credit is generally given for three hours per week-in and out of class- graduate program is available. Areas of concentration may be shown on the program of study but are not listed on the transcript. Graduate Major-Area of specialization, approved by the State Board of Higher Education, in which students may qualify for a graduate degree. Graduate Minor-An academic area that clearly supports the major. course or program that interprets concepts, knowledge, or faculty from several fields of study. Major (Undergraduate)-The undergraduate major is an extensive program of study in a designated subject area. Minor (Undergraduate)-A secondary field of specialized study which may be offered by an academic unit for its own majors and/or majors from other academic units. Minors require at least 27 credits, 12 of which must be in upper division courses. Option (Undergraduate)-Options are for students of a specific major. Options consist of at least 21 designated credits of course work, 15 of which must be at the upper division level. If all requirements have been met, the option may be listed on a student's transcript. Perspectives Courses-Courses that integrate fundamental knowledge from science and liberal arts disciplines to develop cultural, historic, and scientific perspectives. Reading and Conference-A course focused on reading assignments to be completed in conferences with the instructor. Reserved Numbered Courses-Certain of work. For example, each hour of class lecture is generally expected to require two hours of work out of class and so one credit would be given for a lecture course that met for one 50 minute period each week. One credit is typically given for a laboratory course that meets for 2 to 3 hours per week for an entire term. Equivalent credits are given for recitations, discussions, and other types of courses. All credits given in the General Catalog refer to quarter credits. blocks of numbers that have been assigned for specific courses that may be taken for more than one term. The credits being granted vary according to the amount of work done. Curriculum-(plural curricula) An orga- 404/504: Writing and Conference nized program of study and courses required for a specific degree program. Discipline-A field of study in which a student may concentrate, such as sociology, anthropology, or mathematics. 100-110 and 200-210: Survey or foundation courses in the liberal arts and sciences 401/501: Research Course 402/502: Independent Study Course 403/503: Thesis/Dissertation A Guide to Reading the Catalog READING A COURSE DESCRIPTION The elements of a typical course description found under department headings in the colleges that follow are illustrated by the political science course below: PS 422/PS 522. INTERNATIONAL LAW (3). Theories and historical development of international law, problems in development classic cases. PREREQ: PS 101, PS 202, or PS 205 or PS 206. CROSSLISTED as ANTH 422/ANTH 522. (NC) 405/505: Reading and Conference 406/506: Special Problems/Special Projects 407/507: Seminar 408/508: Workshop 409/509: Practicum/Clinical Experience 410/510: Internship/Work Experience Sequence-Two, three, or four closely related courses that are usually taken in numerical order and through more than one term. Skills Courses-Courses designed to give the student fundamental mathematical, communication, and fitness competence. Synthesis Courses-Upper-division courses that emphasize interdisciplinary, critical thinking approaches to global, technological, and societal issues. Term-Usually one-third of the school year. Terms at OSU are divided into fall, winter, and spring terms. Summer term is generally an 8- or 11-week session during the summer. Waive-This term refers to decisions of advisers to "waive" a course or courses in a student's program. Typical reasons include transfer credit for equivalent courses, equivalent experience in the profession or discipline, and petitioning for and successfully completing an examination. Waiving courses usually does not decrease the total credits required for completion of the degree or program; students should discuss this with their adviser. Writing Intensive Courses (WIC)-Designated upper division courses in the major discipline that use student writing as a significant approach to learning. WIC courses must meet a variety of requirements, as do other courses in the Baccalaureate Core. Designator: (PS) an abbreviation representing the department offering the course. PS indicates that the course is offered through the Department of Political Science. Number: (422) indicates the level of the course; this is an upper division, undergraduate course. 400-level courses (PS 422) is offered for undergraduate credit, while the 500-level course (PS 522) is offered at the graduate level. (See Course Numbering System.) Letter Suffix: (PS 422H) When a letter follows the course number, the letter indicates the section of the course offered or that there is something special about the course that students should know. For instance, PS 422H would be an honors course. H: honors course X: temporary course Title: (INTERNATIONAL LAW) Credit: (3) the number of credits awarded for successful completion of the course. Graduate Credit: All courses numbered 500 and above may be taken for graduate credit. Courses numbered 500-599 are generally taken by masters candidates and courses numbered 600-699 are taken by doctoral candidates. Course Description: Theories and historical development of classic cases. A brief description of what will be taught in the course. Lec: Lecture Lab: Laboratory Rec: Recitation P/N: Pass/No pass PREREQ: (PS 101, PS 102, or PS 205 or PS 206) the background necessary for successful performance in a course. Students may attempt a course without having prerequisites if they have obtained the consent of the instructor to do so. If consent is not obtained, then students who have not fulfilled published prerequisites may be disenrolled from the course during the first week of classes. Occasionally a course will have a COREQ usually indicating a course to be taken simultaneously with the course described. REQ: a requirement for that course. CROSSLISTED: (CROSSLISTED as ANTH 422/ANTH 522) means the same course is also offered through another department; course numbers, titles, descriptions, and prerequisites are the same for both courses. DUAL LISTING: (NE 444/NE 544) means the course is offered at both the upper division and graduate level. Students wanting undergraduate credit take the course at the 4xx number, and students wanting graduate credit take the course at the 5xx number. Students taking the course for graduate credit may be assigned extra work and/or have their work graded against a higher standard. (NC): Area study requirement for students majoring in the College of Liberal Arts. Four symbols are used in the college to indicate courses which may be used to fulfill requirements in each of the areas: (FA) Fine arts (H) Humanities (NC) Non-western culture (SS) Social studies COURSE NUMBERING SYSTEM Throughout the State System of Higher Education, courses follow this basic course numbering system: 0-99. Noncredit or credit courses of a remedial, terminal, or semiprofessional nature not applicable toward degree requirements. 100-299. Lower division courses. 300-499. Upper division courses. 500-599. Graduate courses offered primarily in support of master's degree level courses but which are also available for doctoral level credit. Seniors of superior scholastic achievement may be admitted on approval of instructor and department head concerned. 600-699. Graduate courses offered principally in support of doctoral level instructional programs but also available for master's program credit. 700-799. Professional or technical courses which may be applied toward a professional degree (such as D.V.M.) but not toward other graduate degrees (such as Ph.D.). 800-899. In-service courses with limited application toward advanced degrees. Cu Cu These calendars are offered for planning purposes. Official calendars with full details will be published in the Schedule of Classes. FALL TERM, 1993 Preregistration - for currently enrolled students May, 1993 Summer Orientation and Advising Program (SOAP)) for new students Late June and July Continuous Registration and Schedule Adjustment August and September New Student Orientation , Advisin g and Registration - for students not participating in SOAP September 23-24, Thursday, Friday WINTER TERM, 1994 SPRING TERM, 1994 Preregistration Activities-for Preregistration activities for continuing students continuing students November-December Orientation and Re g istration for new students Prior to the term Classes Begin February-March Orientation and Re g istration for new students Prior to start of term Classes Begin January 3, Monday Late Registration and Add/Drop Begins January 3 , Monday Martin Luther King , Jr. Day January 17, Monday Finals Week March 28, Monday Late Registration and Add/Drop Begins March 28 Memorial Day May 30, Monday Finals Week March 14-18, Monday-Friday End of Winter Term March 18 June 6-10 , Monday-Friday End of S p rin g Term June 10 , Friday Commencement Classes Begin July 12 , Sunday September 27, Monday Late Registration and Add/Drop Begins September 27, Monday Thanksgiving Vacation November 25-28, Thursday-Sunday Finals Week December 6-10, Monday-Friday End of Fall Term December 10, Friday a.= Admission to Oregon State Oregon State University welcomes all students without regard to race, creed, sex, marital status, sexual preference, age, religion, handicap, or national origin who provide evidence of suitable preparation for course work at the university level. UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSION WHEN TO APPLY The application and fee must be postmarked by the deadline. Term of Entry Summer 1993 Fall 1993 Winter 1994 Spring 1994 Summer 1994 Fall 1994 Application Deadline March 1, 1993 March 1, 1993 December 1, 1993 February 28, 1994 March 1, 1994 March 1, 1994 These deadlines are subject to change MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION CONSIDERATION Grade-Point Average KAY CONRAD A minimum of 3.00 on the standard unweighted 4-point scale as calculated by the Office of Admissions is required for admission consideration. Alternative to GPA: Applicants who do not meet the minimum high school GPA requirement may be considered on a combination of high school GPA and SAT/ACT test scores that predict success at OSU. CATHY ROBAND without notice as circumstances demand. THE ADMISSION PROCESS Take your completed application and the $50 non-refundable application fee for those applying for Summer Session '94 and beyond to your high school counselor. Ask the counselor to attach an official high school record and mail everything to the Office of Admissions in the envelope provided. Be sure to affix sufficient postage. We do not accept credentials by telefax (FAX), and we ask you not to submit video tapes, photographs, or portfolios of design or art work. They are not used for admission purposes and will not be returned. Similarly, interviews are not a part of the admission process. EVALUATION PROCESS Admission to Oregon State University is selective and competitive. Successful completion of all minimum admission requirements generally ensures admission to the University. All course work taken from the 9th grade through high school graduation is used in the GPA calculation. We do not add points for AP, Honors, IB, or Distinguished Scholar courses. In addition, if you repeated a class in either high school or college, the grades are averaged. Pluses and minuses are not used in the GPA calculation. Complete applications are first reviewed to confirm successful completion of the 14 high school subject requirements. We then calculate an unweighted GPA on the standard 4-point grading scale. Finally, we check for SAT or ACT scores. The most recently reported test scores are on the Letter of Admission. Applicants are notified of their admission status on a rolling basis. SELECTION PROCESS High school preparation as measured by the rigor of high school course work and the grade-point average provides the greatest indication of potential for success at the university level. Therefore, OSU carefully considers the quality and quantity of courses completed in high school. In addition, applicants are expected to maximize the academic preparation available in their particular high school. OSU expects that the most rigorous or advanced level of course work should be pursued. At least three solid subjects (such as English, science, mathematics, foreign languages, etc.) should be scheduled for the senior year. College Preparatory Subject Requirements Entering freshmen must complete the following subjects by high school graduation: English (4 units) 4 years study of English language, literature, speaking, listening, and writing, with emphasis on and frequent practice in writing expository prose Mathematics (3 units) 1 year algebra 2 additional years of college preparatory mathematics. Regardless of the pattern of math courses or the number of years of math taken, the math course work must culminate at the algebra II (or equiva- lent) or higher level to meet the math requirement Social Studies (3 units) 1 year of U.s. history 1 year of global studies (world history, contemporary world cultures, geography, modern problems, etc.) 1 years of social studies elective (government, economics, religion, psychology, etc.) Science (1 units) 1 year each of two different preparatory sciences such as biology, chemistry, physics, or earth and physical science. One year laboratory experience recommended. Other College Preparatory Courses (2 units) May be a foreign language (highly recommended), computer science, fine and performing arts, or other college preparatory electives, including advanced-level vocational-technical courses. Director of Admissions Associate Director CLAY TORSET Assistant Director GEORGE GAINES Assistant to the Director [Ic Admission ALTERNATIVES TO SUBJECT REQUIREMENTS Students unable to fulfill the subject requirements may be considered for admission by: 1. Earning a 1230 total score on three College Board Achievement Tests (English, Math level I or II, and a third test of choice) OR 2. Successfully completing course work (high school or college transfer) for specific subject deficiencies. Alternatives must be complete by high school graduation. Test Requirements Freshman applicants (except those applying on the basis of GED scores) must submit Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) or American College Test (ACT) scores. Test scores are used to determine course placement and are not a factor in the selection process for fully qualified applicants. Test scores are evaluated when consideration is given on a spaceavailable basis to applicants not meeting the minimum high school GPA requirement. High School Graduation Public high school students must graduate from standard or accredited high schools. Private high school students must graduate from accredited high schools. Graduates of non-standard or unaccred- ited high schools may be considered for admission by achieving: 1. A minimum composite score of 970 on the SAT or 22 on the ACT AND 2. A minimum score of 40 on each of the five GED tests. OLDER STUDENTS Applicants who graduated from high school prior to 1985 must present SAT or ACT scores and meet the minimum grade-point average requirement for entering freshmen. The high school subject requirements are waived. PETITION FOR ADMISSION BY EXCEPTION Students who believe they may not meet the admission requirements are encouraged to submit a handwritten essay explaining their circumstances with their application. Students not approved for admission will be provided with information about the petition procedure. Deadlines are in effect each term for appeals. For additional information, write or call the OSU Office of Admissions. ADVANCED STANDING CREDIT Oregon State University awards ungraded credit for achievement on certain College Board Advanced Placement (AP) examinations. Information pertaining to specific AP credit policies is provided by high school counseling centers or may be obtained from the OSU Office of Admissions. OSU's college code is 4586 for those wishing to have their scores sent. Advanced standing credit may also be granted for scores of 5 or higher on the International Baccalaureate (IB) Higher Level examinations. Official IB certificates are required in order for credit to be awarded. TRANSFER ADMISSION TO APPLY The application and fee must the postmarked by the deadline and applicants must be fully eligible for consideration by the deadline. Term of Entry Application Deadline Summer 1993 May 21, 1993 Fall 1993 June 15, 1993 Winter 1994 December 1, 1993 Spring 1994 February 28, 1994 Summer 1994 May 27, 1994 Fall 1994 June 15, 1994 These deadlines are subject to change without notice as circumstances demand. Summer work may not be used to qualify for consideration for fall term. CRITERIA FOR ADMISSION CONSIDERATION U.S. Citizens and Permanent Residents: Successful completion of no less than 36 (24 semester) graded, transferable credits from (an) accredited U.S. institution(s) Minimum cumulative GPA of 2.25 Grade of C- or better earned in the following courses: a. College-level writing beginning with WR 121 (English Composition) or equivalent b. Mathematics course with course content of College Algebra for which the prerequisite is Intermediate Algebra Be eligible to return to most recent college or university attended Consideration will be given to applicants with a 2.00 GPA and an associate of arts degree from an Oregon community college. Computation of GPA: The official policies of OSU regarding academic record evaluation include: grades of repeated courses are averaged only college-level, transferable credits are counted in those accepted in the GPA computation (vocational-technical course grades are not included) academic bankruptcy for forgiveness of low grades is not a policy recognized at OSU. Students with at least 12 but fewer than 36 graded transferable hours of credit will be considered on the basis of their high school records and test scores, and must have a 2.25 GPA on all collegiate work attempted. International Applicants International undergraduate applicants should request an International Student Application from the Office of Admissions. In addition to the requirements noted above on work completed in the U.S. they must have: A minimum TOEFL score of 550 if native languages is not English. Evaluation of and Transferability of Credit Only official records are used to evaluate eligibility for admission and transferability of t. credit. Credit accepted in transfer must have been completed at one or more accredited colleges or universities. Official transcripts of all college work attempted must be submitted directly from the Registrar's Office of each institution. We do not accept credentials or information by telefax (FAX). OSU accepts in transfer all college-level courses successfully completed at any accredited college or university. An Advanced Standing Report acknowledging the courses accepted by the University will be sent by the Admissions Office after admission status has been confirmed and before the opening of the student's first term at OSU. Persons transferring to OSU from a community or junior college may have up to 108 term credits (72 semester units) accepted toward their bachelor's degree. If the school previously attended used the semester system, one semester credit equals 1.5 quarter credits at OSU. OSU's academic regulations provide for the acceptance of some vocational or technical courses after registration, not at the time of admission. Credit will be granted if the student's administering department finds that vocational or technical courses have satisfied certain bachelor's degree requirements. Students with such courses should contact the assistant registrar for help in obtaining credit. PETITION FOR ADMISSION BY EXCEPTION Students who do not meet admission requirements may petition for exception. For further information, write or call the Office of Admissions. Deadlines for appeals are in effect for each quarter. Acceptance of credit from a two-year institution (OSU Academic Regulation 2): a. Oregon State University accepts for credit toward a baccalaureate degree all college transfer work completed in an Oregon or other accredited community college up to 108 lower division credits. A student who has completed 108 lower division credits must obtain approval of a petition in advance before completing additional lower division work at a two-year institution if credit for such additional work is to count toward graduation. Transfer credits and grades are not used in calculating the OSU cumulative GPA. Students who hold the Associate of Arts or other transfer degrees and who have 90 or more credits accepted in transfer will be granted junior standing. Such standing does not necessarily imply that OSU institutional, college, or division and departmental requirements normally satisfied by OSU students prior to their Admission junior year have been satisfied. Students who have received Associate of Arts degrees from Oregon community colleges will be considered to have met the Perspectives and Skills (except WIC) areas of the Baccalaureate Core. They must complete the upper division Synthesis areas of the Core. Students transferring from approved institutions of higher education ordinarily will be given Baccalaureate Core credit in the Perspectives and Skills areas on a course-bycourse basis for work that is judged to be equivalent in content. They must complete upper division Synthesis Courses. b. Block transfer of vocational-technical credit from accredited or state-approved community colleges into specific departmental programs at Oregon State University may be awarded up to 45 credits on the basis of proficiencies, work experience, and/or technical courses as determined by the appropriate department, but without assignment of grade. Such credits will apply to the agreed transfer program only, and the credit will not be awarded until completion of the program by the student and these credits will not be used to classify students. The 45 credits, or portion thereof, transferred will count as part of the 108 credits defined in paragraph a above. c. Lower division credit for specific vocational-technical community college courses may be awarded for equivalent OSU course work when equivalency is validated by the OSU department offering the equivalent work. Equivalent credit will be awarded only upon the recommendation of the appropriate department or college, and approval by the academic requirements committee. If the vocational-technical community college course and the equivalent OSU course vary in credits, the number of course credits that may be granted will be the lesser of the two. These credits will count as part of the 108 credits defined in paragraph a above. OSU departments offering courses which have been identified as equivalent to designated community college vocational-technical courses shall review the equivalency W qualifies according to Academic Regulation annually and forward a dated list of the 1 in the Schedule of Classes as a regular stuequivalent community college courses to dent and satisfies regular admissions procethe academic requirements committee. dures and regulations. Non-degree students d. In cases where paragraph b above is who enroll in seven (7) or fewer credits are not applicable, up to 24 credits of lower not subject to non-resident tuition rates. division credit for specific vocational-technical community college courses may be SELECT A MAJOR awarded (but without assignment of grade) Undergraduates and postbaccalaureate applifor nonequivalent OSU course work when cants beginning with those applying for the proficiencies, training, or experiences gained by the student are recognized by the Summer Session, 1993 and beyond must select a college and a major within that colappropriate OSU department and college. lege. Applicants are provided with a list of Credit will be awarded only upon the recmajor codes from which to select the approommendation of the appropriate departpriate one to enter on the application form. ment or college, and approval of the University exploratory Studies Program is a academic requirements committee. No choice available to undergraduate who are more credit will be offered by OSU than undecided about a major. Applicants must was offered by the community college for note that because programs are administhe course involved in a given transfer. The tered by the college that sponsors them, course prefix and number to be used in admission to OSU does not mean admission awarding of such credit is VocT 100. The 24 to a particular professional college or procredits, or portion thereof, awarded will gram. Examples are the professional procount as part of the 108 term credits grams in engineering and pharmacy which defined in paragraph a above. The credit require separate applications submitted will not be granted until completion of the student's program and these credits will not directly to the respective college. Postbaccalaureate applicants are admitted to the be used to classify students. In the event University only if the desired department the student transfers into another OSU approves. department, the new department will reevaluate the appropriateness of such ADMISSION OF vocational-technical training or experience. POSTBACCALAUREATE STUDENTS This provision may not be used in combiPostbaccalaureate students are those eith nation with that in paragraph b above. seeking a second bachelor's degree or pursuADMISSION AS A NON-DEGREE ing an undergraduate certificate program. UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT Applicants for consideration must meet the same application deadline and GPA requireThe non-degree undergraduate student category is designed to aid the enrollment of aments as transfers. The GPA is computed on person who at the time of application is not the first baccalaureate degree plus any subsequent credit earned. Academic departments planning to complete degree requirements may impose additional requirements. Appliat OSU or who, for reasons which are cations are available from the Office of judged to be acceptable, does not meet regAdmissions. ular admission requirements. The Office of Admissions may consider ADMISSION WITH for entrance as a non-degree student: GRADUATE STANDING 1. A person qualified for regular admisTo be considered for admission to the Gradsion but not planning to earn a degree at uate School, an applicant must have a bacOSU. calaureate degree from an accredited college 2. A person who is not qualified for reguor university, as well as a scholastic record, lar admission, is at least four years beyond background, or other evidence the date that his or her high school class that indicates the ability to do satisfactory has graduated, and is not planning to earn graduate work. See Graduate School for fura degree at OSU. This does not apply to a ther information on advanced degree, postperson who has attended college. baccalaureate, and nondegree, graduate 3. A high school junior or senior with a student status. Also see Graduate Admission grade-point average of at least 3.00 who is Procedure. recommended (in writing) by his or her principal for enrollment in a specific course ADMISSION OF (or courses). INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS 4. A nonresident ethnic minority appliAn international student is admitted accordcant who does not meet regular admission ing to standards established for each counrequirements but desires to enter some spe- try by the admissions committee. Basically cialized OSU academic program not availsuch a student must (a) be qualified to enter able in the applicant's state. a university or graduate school in his or her 5. An otherwise qualified applicant who own country; (b) have achieved a superior has been unable to obtain complete and/or scholastic record on the basis of his or her official credentials required to document own grading system; and (c) have certified admission as a regular student. English proficiency as indicated by a score Recorded credit will be applied to a of 550 or more on the Test of English as a degree only if the non-degree student Foreign Language (TOEFL). 12 Admission University provisional admission of international students presenting TOEFL scores from 500 through 549 may be granted. Such provisional admission requires (a) on-campus testing of English language proficiency prior to enrollment, (b) compliance with the subsequently specified plan for English and academic course work during each quarter until such time as the student qualifies for nonprovisional admission. At the undergraduate level the head adviser of each college or school specifies this plan; at the graduate level the Graduate School specifies this plan. Appeals from the specified plan are made to the head adviser at the undergraduate level and to the Graduate School at the graduate level. Exceptions to the English proficiency test requirement are: (a) those applicants from English speaking countries such as Canada, United Kingdom, etc., (b) those graduate applicants who have finished a previous degree in an English speaking country, (c) those who have completed English course work or taken other tests deemed to be equivalent to the required minimum score on the TOEFL. A student with less than a four-year bachelor's degree, or with a diploma, certificate, or title not accepted as equivalent to a bachelor's degree, may apply for undergraduate admission but may not enter the Graduate School. All records in a foreign language must include the originals accompanied by a certified English translation. A complete description of all schooling from primary or elementary school to present level of training is needed to permit better understanding of academic preparation. A GPA of 2.25 (undergraduate) and grades of "A" or "B" (graduate) are necessary on work accepted in transfer from an American college or university. ADMISSION TO SUMMER SESSION Those persons who expect to attend regular sessions or who wish to begin work on a degree during Summer Session at OSU must satisfy regular admission requirements and apply by the specified deadlines. ADMISSION FROM INSTITUTIONS WITH ACCREDITATION NOT RECOGNIZED BY OSU Admission from an unaccredited institution is determined by the appropriate admissions committee. Students admitted from unaccredited colleges are on probation until they have achieved a satisfactory record at OSU. After three terms of work at OSU satisfactory to the academic requirements committee, a student may request validation of work done in an unaccredited institution of collegiate rank. The committee will consider each petition separately and base its decision on all information available. In some instances, informal examinations by the departments concerned may be required. CREDIT FOR MILITARY EXPERIENCE Veterans of the U.S. Armed Forces are granted physical education and/or ROTC credit but do not receive college credit for service schooling, USAFI tests, or courses. Application should be made to the veterans' clerk (Registrar's Office) during the first term of attendance at Oregon State University. ADMISSION PROCEDURE Questions regarding admission and applications for admission, accompanied by the $50 nonrefundable application fee (payable to Oregon State University), should be addressed to the Office of Admissions. The $50 application fee is required of all those seeking admission beginning Summer Session 1994 and beyond. Application for undergraduates, postbaccalaureate, graduates and non-degree students are available from the Office of Admissions. The applicant requests the high school principal and/or the registrar of each college attended to forward certified transcripts of all academic records directly to the Office of Admissions for evaluation. All records submitted become the property of OSU. Transcripts for transfer students must include all school work beyond high school and, for graduate students, all undergraduate and graduate records. ADMISSION TO PROFESSIONAL PROGRAMS To protect students and professional standards, the admission and retention requirements and standards for evaluation and acceptance of transfer credit are often in addition to general admission and transfer requirements. Admission to Oregon State University does not, therefore, automatically admit students to its professional programs. Because professional education is accredited and approved by societies established by the professions, students admitted to these programs must be prepared to undertake the curriculum at whatever level they enter it and to maintain program standards. k "1 PLACEMENT EXAMINATIONS to enter OSU High school seniors planning must take the SAT or the ACT. (See Admis- sion.) Either test, along with high school and other records, provides the academic adviser with valuable information about the student's educational development, abilities, and aptitudes. Other placement examinations may be required in certain majors. Students who enter the University with previous language training from another institution and who wish to continue their study of the language are required to take a language proficiency examination to determine placement level. REGISTRATION PROCEDURES Once admitted to Oregon State University, the information and procedures for registration become increasingly important. Registration periods, with published dates, are set aside each term. Complete registration instructions, procedures, and deadlines for which every student is fully responsible are detailed in the annual Schedule of Classes, available on campus. A student is officially registered and eligible to attend classes only when all procedures have been completed, including payment of tuition and fees. In addition to the basic information regarding registration, the Schedule of Classes is an essential source document to the student for the academic calendar, fee schedule, academic and other student regulations and procedures, and final week schedule, as well as for the listing of courses offered during the academic year. REENROLLMENT Students who wish to reenroll in the University after an absence may do so providing they were eligible to reenroll their last term of attendance. Students who have been absent 4 or more terms, not including summer terms, should contact the Office of Admissions to reactivate their records. All others may proceed with registration following the registration instructions in the current Schedule of Classes. Reenrolling students who have attended another college or university since their last term at OSU are required to report that enrollment at the time of reentry. Official transcripts must be forwarded to the Office of the Registrar. Students with transfer work less than 2.0 GPA are reminded of the graduation requirements which stipulates that an overall 2.0 GPA is needed in all college work. All reenrolling students are reminded of the responsibility to update any outdated records information. Current addresses will be needed. Contact the Office of the Registrar for changes to records. Earning a Degree at Oregon State UNIVERSITY GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS Current graduation requirements are printed each year in the "Academic Regulations and Procedures" section of the Schedule of Classes, along with other information on a wide range of topics-from minimum credits for full-time status to adding courses. All students are encouraged to review this part of the Schedule of Classes each year for the most up-to-date information about OSU requirements and procedures. Students with questions about baccalaureate graduation requirements are encouraged to contact their adviser. Students needing assistance in selecting a major or selecting an adviser may wish to call or stop by the college office. THE BACCALAUREATE EXPERIENCE Oregon State University is a Land Grant University with a mission that includes a strong commitment to undergraduate education. Central to this commitment is the establishment of an intellectual environment that encourages the formation of the essential characteristics of the educated person-curiosity, rigorous observation, tolerant understanding, and a commitment to lifelong learning. The diverse academic programs in each of the distinctive colleges are unified by common expectations for the achievement of the baccalaureate degree. Graduates with a baccalaureate degree from Oregon State University should be able not only to appreciate the intrinsic value of human knowledge, but also to use it to engage in both scientific and philosophical inquiry. Critical thinking and problem solving, integrating knowledge from a wide range of fields, are essential components of the degree. Oregon State University graduates should also possess intellectual curiosity, understanding of diverse cultural heritages, and a proper regard for different values, ideas, and cultures. The baccalaureate degree includes: a) general education requirements; b) an in-depth study in at least one major; and c) individual elective courses. Minors are available in many areas and are required in certain programs. Students should check departmental requirements. THE BACCALAUREATE CORE The Baccalaureate Core emphasizes writing, creative thinking, cultural diversity, the arts, sciences, literature, life-long fitness, and global awareness. Included are 51 credits plus a writing intensive course in the major. The course categories are listed below. Individual courses are listed later in this section. BACCALAUREATE CORE REQUIREMENTS Skills (15) No single course may be used by a student to satisfy more than one area of the core even though some courses are approved for more than one area. Writing I (3) Writing 11 (3) Writing III/Speech (3) Mathematics: MTH 105 or higher level mathematics (3) Fitness (3) WIC (Writing Intensive Course, upper division, included in credits for major) Perspectives (30) No more than two courses from any one department may be used to satisfy the Perspectives area of the core. Physical Science (including lab) (4) Biological Science (including lab) (4) Plus choice of additional physical or biological science (including lab) (4) Western Culture (3) Cultural Diversity (3) Literature and the Arts (3) Social Processes and Institutions (3) Plus two additional courses in two of the four preceding areas (6) Synthesis (Upper Division) (6) Both synthesis courses may not be taken in the same department. Contemporary Global Issues (3) Science, Technology, and Society (3) Total (51) + WIC MAJOR PROGRAM In-depth study in one area is required in each baccalaureate degree. Major requirements often include not only courses within the given discipline but also necessary prerequisites and work in related areas. Students must satisfy all the requirements of their major department, and the dean's certification of fulfillment of all requirements of the major college is also required. TOTAL CREDITS A minimum of 192 quarter credits that can be applied toward the degree is required for graduation. The College of Engineering requires a minimum of 204 credits and the Forest Engineering Department of the College of Forestry requires 200 credits. The College of Pharmacy requires a minimum of 240 credits for graduation in their five-year curriculum. UPPER DIVISION COURSES A minimum of 60 credits of the total number (must be in courses numbered 300 and/or 400. (Courses numbered 500 or 600 may also be counted in the 60-credit upper division requirement, but they may not simultaneously be counted for graduate degree requirements.) At least 24 upper division credits must be taken in the major. 13 CORRESPONDENCE COURSES Some restrictions apply for correspondence courses. Students should check with their college advisers before enrolling in any correspondence course. GRADE POINT AVERAGE (GPA) Students must attain a minimum cumulative OSU GPA of 2.00. RESIDENCE REQUIREMENT Candidates for undergraduate degrees must earn their last 45 credits in course work offered by OSU or 45 of the last 60 credits if authorized by the student's dean. A minimum of 15 credits of upper division credits must be taken in the student's major from courses regularly listed in the OSU General Catalog or Schedule of Classes. Credits earned through certain designated programs such as a foreign study program sponsored by the Oregon State System of Higher Education or an OSU off-campus degree program approved by OSSHE) may be used in fulfilling the residence requirement. Credits earned by special examination may not be used to meet the residence requirement. A student must be enrolled at OSU in regular standing, not as a "special admit," before undertaking academic work to satisfy residence. For more information, students should consult their advisers. DEGREE CANDIDATES To become a candidate for a degree a student must have achieved senior standing and must make formal application for the degree. The student must file an application with the registrar two terms preceding the term in which he or she expects to complete requirements for a degree. REENROLLING STUDENTS Reenrolling students are reminded that graduation requirements may have changed. Students are responsible for consulting their college for changes in their curriculum. If a program has been discontinued, students cannot expect to continue pursuit of that program. Reenrolling students are also reminded that individual retention and reenrollment standards of specific colleges may be in effect. GENERAL EDUCATION DECISIONS FOR TRANSFER STUDENTS Except as noted below, new students entering OSU in the 1992-93 year or thereafter will complete the Baccalaureate Core as part of their baccalaureate graduation requirements. Oregon community college students entering OSU fall term 1990 or thereafter, having completed the new Associate of Arts (A.A.) degree (meeting the OSSHE-Oregon community college block transfer agreement) will automatically have satisfied all the lower division requirements of the Baccalaureate Core. Earning a Degree Transfer students or returning students should consult with the head adviser of their college if they are unclear about the general education requirements that they need to meet. TRANSFER CREDIT FOR GENERAL EDUCATION COURSES Decisions on transfer courses meeting specific Baccalaureate Core or 1988-90 General Education requirements will be made by OSU college head advisers. Some requirements may be met by advanced placement. For more information, contact a college head adviser. APPROVED BACCALAUREATE CORE COURSES The Oregon State University Baccalaureate Core will continually be enriched. Courses approved for the Baccalaureate Core at the time this catalog was published appear below. SKILLS COURSES (15) Writing I (3) WR 121 English Composition (3) Writing 11 (3) PHL 121 Reasoning and Writing (3) WR 214 Writing in Business (3) WR 222 English Composition (3) WR 224 Introduction to Fiction Writing (3) WR 241 Introduction to Poetry Writing (3) WR 323 English Composition (3) WR 324 Short Story Writing (3) WR 327 Technical Writing (3) WR 341 Poetry Writing (3) Writing III/Speech 111 (3) Any Writing II courses listed above not taken to satisfy Writing II requirement or, COMM 111 Public Speaking (3) COMM 114 Argument and Critical Discourse (3) Mathematics (3) MTH 105 Introduction to Contemporary Mathematics (or higher level mathematics) (3) Fitness (3) HHP 231 Lifetime Fitness for Health (3) Plus WIC courses PERSPECTIVES COURSES (30) No more than two courses from any one department may be used by a student to satisfy the Perspectives category of the core. Physical Science (with lab) (4) CH 122, 123 General Chemistry (5 each) CH 201, 202, 203 Chemistry for Engineering Majors (3 each) CH 221, 222, 223 General Chemistry (5 each) GEO 101,102 Earth Science (4 each) GEO 201 Geology of the Interior of the Earth (4) GEO 202 Geology of the Surface of the Earth (4) GEO 221 Physical Geography (4) PH 104 Descriptive Astronomy (4) PH 106 Perspectives in Physics (4) PH 201, 202, 203 General Physics (5 each) PH 205 Solar System Astronomy (4) PH 206 Stars and Stellar Evolution (4) PH 207 Galaxies, Quasars, and Cosmology (4) PH 211, 212, 213 General Physics with Calculus (4 each) Biological Science (with lab) (4) BB 351 Elementary Biochemistry (with Laborator)] (5) BI 101, BI 102, BI 103. General Biology (4 each) BI 201, 202, 203 Introductory Biology (4 each) BI 211, 212, 213 Biology (5 each) BOT 101 Botany: A Human Concern (4) F 240 Forest Biology (4) MB 230 Introductory Microbiology (4) Z 204 Perspectives in Animal Biology (4) Plus choice of second course in Physical or Biological Sciences (with lab) Western Culture (3) AIHM 379 The Built Environment of Western Cultures (3) AIHM 380 The Built Environment of Western Cultures (3) ART 204, 205, 206 Introduction to Art History -Western (3 each) EC 319 Economic History & Development of the U.S. (3) ENG 110 Introduction to Film Studies (3) ENG 125 Film Comedy (3) ENG 201, 202, 203 Shakespeare (3 each) ENG 204, 205, 206 Survey of English Literature (3 each) ENG 207, 208, 209 Literature of Western Civilization (3 each) ENG 215 Classical Mythology (3) ENG 253, 254, 255 Survey of American Literature (3 each) ENG 317, 318, 319 The American Novel (3 each) ENG 368 Homer and Company: The Epic Tradition (3) FR 331, 332, 333 French Culture and Society Since the Revolution (3 each) FW 201 Nature and the Western Mind (3) GEO 106 Geography of the Western World (3) GEO 326 Geography of Europe (3) GEO 329 Geography of the United States and Canada (3) GER 331, 332 German Culture (3 each) HST 101, 102, 103 History of Western Civilization (3 each) HST 201, 202, 203 History of the United States (3 each) HST 260, HST 261, HST 262. American Lives (2 each) MUS 102 Sound and Silence: Music in Human Experience (3) PHL 150 Great Ideas in Philosophy (3) PHL 201 Introduction to Philosophy (4) PHL 205 Ethics (4) PHL 207 Political Philosophy (4) PHL 220 World Views and Values: Old Testament (4) PHL 221 World Views and Values: New Testa- ment (4) PHL 230 Christianity & Western Culture (4) PHL 301, 302, 303 History of Western Philosophy (4 each) PHL 360 Philosophy and the Arts (4) PHL 365 Law in Philosophical Perspective (4) PS 206 Introduction to Political Thought (4) RUS 331, 332, 333 Russian Culture (3 each) SPAN 331, 332, 333 The Cultures of Spain and Portugal (3 each) SPAN 336, 337, 338 Latin American Culture (3 each) TCS 200 Twentieth Century Amer Realities (3) TCS 201 Twentieth Century Amer Dreams (3) Cultural Diversity (3) ANTH 210 Comparative Cultures (3) ANTH 311, 313, 314, 315, 316, 317, 318, 319 Peoples of the World (3 each) ART 207 Indigenous Art of the Americas (3) CHN 331, 332, 333 Chinese Culture (3 each) ENG 210, 211, 212, 213 Literature of NonEuropean Civilization (3 each) ENG 360 Native American Literature (3) GEO 105 Geography of the Non-Western World (3) GEO 325 Geography of Africa (3) GEO 327 Geography of Asia (3) GEO 328 Geography of Latin America (3) HST 320 Ancient Near East (4) HST 350, 351 Modern Latin America (4 each) HST 381, 382 History of Africa (4 each) HST 387, 388, 389 History of the Middle East each) HST 391, 392 East Asia (4 each) JPN 331, 332, 333 Japanese Culture (3 each) MUS 108 Musical Cultures of the World (3) NFM 216 Food in Non-Western Culture (3) PHL 160 Quests for Meaning: World Religions (4) PHL 311, PHL 312, PHL 313 History of Nonwestern Religious Ideas (3-4 each) PHL 371 Philosophies of China (4) PHL 372 Philosophies of India (4) Literature and the Arts (3) ART 101 Introduction to the Visual Arts (4) ART 204, 205, 206 Introduction to Art History -Western (3 each) ENG 104, 105, 106 Introduction to Literature (3 each) ENG 110 Introduction to Film Studies (3) ENG 201, 202, 203 Shakespeare (3 each) ENG 204, 205, 206 Survey of English Literature (3 each) ENG 207, 208, 209 Literature of Western Civilization (3 each) ENG 210, 211, 212, 213 Literature of NonEuropean Civilization (3 each) ENG 215 Mythology (3) ENG 245 The New American Cinema (3) ENG 253, 254, 255 Survey of American Literature (3 each) ENG 260 Literature of American Minorities (3) ENG 265 Films for the Future (3) ENG 275 The Bible as Literature (3) ENG 317, 318, 319 The American Novel (3 each) ENG 362 Women's Voices in American Literature (3) ENG 368 Homer and Company: The Epic Tradition (3) ENG 374 Modem Short Story (3) MUS 101 Music Appreciation (3) MUS 103 Great Composers (3) MUS 107 Folk Music of North America (3) MUS 109 Introduction to jazz (3) TA 330, TA 331, TA 332 History of the Theatre (3 each) Social Processes and Institutions (3) ANTH 110 Introduction to Cultural Anthropology (3) EC 201, 202 Introduction to Macroeconomics (3 each) HOEC 201 Individual and Family Develop (3) PS 101 American Politics (4) PS 102 American Government (4) Earning a Degree PS 200 Introduction to Political Science (4) PSY 201, 202 General Psychology (3 each) SOC 204 Introduction to Sociology (3) SOC 205 Institutions and Social Change (3) Plus choice of two additional courses In two of the following areas: Cultural Diversity, Western Culture, Literature and the Arts, or Social Problems (6) SYNTHESIS COURSES (6) The two courses used to fulfill the Synthesis requirement may not be in the same deparment. Contemporary Global Issues (3) ANTH 380 Cultures in Conflict (3) ANTH 482 World Food & the Cultural Implications of International Agricultural Development (3) ANTH 483 Medical Anthropology (3) ANTH 484 Wealth & Poverty (3) ANTH 487 Language in Global Context (3) ANTH 488 Business & Asian Culture (3) AREC 351 Natural Resource Management (4) AREC 361 Agricultural and Food Policy Issues (4) AREC 433 International Agricultural Development (3) BI 301 Human Impacts on Ecosystems (3) ENG 414 Criticism, Culture and World Community (3) ENG 416 Power and Representation (3) ENG 498 Women and Literature (3) F 365 Issues in Natural Resources Conserv (3) HDFS 450 Families & Quality of Life in the Developing World (3) HDFS 471 The World Consumer (3) FW 325 Global Crises in Resource Ecology (3) GEO 300 Environmental Conservation (3) GEO 350 Population Geography (3) H 312 AIDS and Sexually Transmitted Diseases in Modern Society (3) HST 317 Why War? A Historical Perspective (4) NFM 415 Global Food Resources and Nutr (3) PS 345 The Politics of Developing Nations (4) PHL 443 Values and Human Ecology (3) RNG 468 International Rangeland Resource Management (3) TCS 300 World Community in the Twentieth Century: Development (3) TCS 301 World Community in the Twentieth Century: Underdevelopment (3) WS 480 International Women (3) Science, Technology, & Society (3) AG 492 Technology Transfer in Agriculture (3) ANS 315 Animal Prod Issues of Concern to Society (3) ANTH 432 The Archaeology of Domestication & Urbanization (3) ANTH 481 Natural Resources & Community Values (3) ART 367 History of Design (3) BB 331, 332 Intro to Molecular Biology (3 each) BI 333 Environmental Problem Solving (3) BI/BOT 489 Analysis of Environmental Issues (3) CH 374 Technology, Energy, and Risk (3) CE 356 Technology and Environmental Systems (3) CS 391 Social & Ethical Issues in Computer Science (3) CSS 395 World Soil Resources (3) ENG 415 Industrialism and the English Novel (3) ENT/BI 300 Plagues, Pests and Politics (3) FST 421 Food Law (3) GEO 300 Environmental Conservation (3) GEO 321 Changing Human Landscapes (3) GEO 411 Development of Geologic Thought (3) HST 481 Environmental History of the U.S. (4) HSTS 411, 412, 413 History of Science (3 each) HSTS 415 Theory of Evolution and Foundation of Modern Biology (3) HSTS 416 Science and the Emergence of Modern Society100 (3) HSTS 417 History of Medicine (3) HSTS 418, 419 Science and Society (3 each) HSTS 421 Technology and Change (3) NFM 312 Issues in Nutrition and Health (3) PH 313 Energy Alternatives (3) PH 331 Sound, Hearing, and Music (3) PH 332 Light, Vision, and Color (3) PS 476 Science and Politics (4) RNG 477 Agroforestry (3) SOC 456 Science and Technology in Social Context (3) Z 345 Introduction to Evolution (3) Z 348 Human Ecology (3) APPROVED WRITING INTENSIVE COURSES (WIC) College of Agricultural Sciences AG 421. Leadership Development in Agriculture (3) AREC 361. Agricultural & Food Policy Issues (4) CSS 480. Cropping Systems and Decision Making (4) FW 481 + FW 482. Wildlife Ecology plus Senior Project (3, 2) FST 423. Food Analysis (5) RNG 403. Senior Thesis (3) College of Business BA 469. Strategic Management and Business Policy (4) College of Engineering CE 321. Engineering Materials (4) CHE 414. Chemical Engineering Laboratory (3) CS 361. Software Engineering (4) ECE 422. Data Acquisition II (4) ECE 482. Optical Electronics (4) IE 497. Industrial Engineering Analysis and Design (3) IE 498. Industrial Engineering Analysis and Design (3) ME 351. Mechanical Lab (4) College of Forestry F 415. Forest Policy (4) FP 406A/B/C, Projects/Senior Thesis I, II, III (2, 1, 1) College of Health and Human Performance EXSS 481. Analysis of Critical Issues in Exercise and Sport Science (3) H 430. Health Policy Analysis (3) H 440. Environmental Health (3) H 476. Planning Health Programs (3) H 482. Problems and Research in Safety (3) College of Home Economics and Education AIHM 345. Interior Merchandising Proced (3) AIHM 370. Textile and Apparel Market Analysis (4) AIHM 378. Consumer Housing (3) HDFS 461. Program Development and Evaluation (4) NFM 416. Cultural Aspects of Foods (3) NFM 419. Human Nutrition Laboratory (2) 15 College of Liberal Arts AMS 407. American Studies Seminar (3) ANTH 370. Age, Sex, and Family (3) COMM 418. Interpersonal Communication Theory (3) COMM 430. Theoretical Issues in Communica- tion Inquiry (3) COMM 456. History of Rhetoric (3) COMM 458. History of Rhetoric II (3) COMM 464. Rhetorical Criticism (3) EC 315. Introduction to Economic Research (3) ENG 452. Film Ciritcism & Thought (3) ENG 455. Continental European Literature I (3) ENG 456. Continental European Literature I1(3) ENG 457. Continental European Literature III (3) ENG 470. Studies in Poetry (3) FR 439. French/Francophone Studies (3) GER 411. Fourth-Year German (3) HST 407. History Seminar (5) HSTS 415. Theory of Evolution and Foundation of Modern Biology (GS prior to Fall '92) (3) HSTS 416. Science adn the Emergence of Modern Society (GS prior to Fall '92) (3) HSTS 417. History of Medicine (GS prior to Fall '92) (3) HSTS 418. Science and Scoeity (GS prior to Fall '92) (3) HSTS 419. Science and Society (GS prior to Fall '92) (3) MUS 324. History of Music I (3) MUS 325. History of Music II (3) MUS 326. History of Music III (3) PHL 407. Philosophy Seminar (3) PS 419W. Topics in American Politics (4) PS 429W. Topics in Judicial Politics (4) PS 459W. Topics in International Relations (4) PS 479W. Topics in Bureaucratic Politics and Administrative Theory (4) PSY 430. Animal Behavior (3) PSY 440. Cognition Research (3) PSY 460A. Advanced Social Research (3) PSY 460B. Advanced Social Research Methods (3) PSY 470. Psychometrics and Psychlogical Testing (3) PSY 480. Case Study Methods (3) SOC 416. Conducting Social Research (3) SPAN 438. Topics in Luso-Hispanic Culture (3) TA 330. History of the Theatre 1 (3) TA 331. History of the Theatre II (3) TA 332. History of the Theatre III (3) WR 411. Writing for Teachers (3) WR 493. History of Rhetoric and the Teaching of Writing (3) WR 495. Comp, Literature, and Literacy (3) College of Pharmacy PHAR 432. Selected Topics in Medicinal Chemistry (2) College of Science BB 493. Biochemistry Lab (2) BI 333. Environmental Problem Solving (GS prior to Fall '92) (3) BI 489. Analysis of Environmental Problems (GS prior to Fall '92) (3) BI 371. Ecological Methods (3) BOT 341 plus BOT 342. Plant Ecology/Writing About Plant Ecology (4) CH 463. Experimental Chemistry (3) GEO 411. Development of Geologic Thought (3) GEO 427. Volcanology (4) GEO 462. Geographic Field Techniques (4) GEO 463. Intro Solid Earth Geophysics (4) GEO 464. Seismic Reflection Interpretation (4) GEO 490. Geologic Field Methods (4) 16 Earning a Degree MTH 333. Fundamental Concepts of Topology (3) MTH 338. Non-Euclidean Geometry (3) MTH 401W. Independent Research (3) MTH 458. Numerical Solution of Ordinary Differential Equations (4) MTH 473. History of Mathematics (3) MB 307. Advanced General Microbiology Lab (2) PH 401. Research and PH 403. Thesis (3) Z 414. Research and Perspectives (2) OTHER GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS B.A. Degree Requirements The Bachelor of Arts degree is conferred for broad and liberal education in humanities, arts, social science, and sciences. Requirements for the B.A. degree differ significantly from those for a Bachelor of Science degree (B.S.) in the same department. Many departments offer only one or the other of the two baccalaureate degrees. Check departmental curricula for detailed information. The B.A. degree requires foreign language proficiency equivalent to that attained at the end of the second year course in the language as certified by the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures. Concurrent Baccalaureate Degrees Students may concurrently earn two or more bachelor's degrees; for example, a B.A. or B.S. with the same or different major. Students must a) meet the institutional, college, and departmental requirements of the curricula represented by the degrees; b) complete for each additional degree a minimum of 32 credits more than the requirements of the curriculum requiring the least number of credits; c) complete each additional 32 credits in residence, or as a minimum, 24 of the 32 credits in residence if authorized by approval of a petition to the academic requirements committee; d) be registered during the last three terms before graduation at least one term in each appropriate college or department. Subsequent Baccalaureate Degrees A student who has previously earned a bachelor's degree from OSU may receive a second such degree if all requirements are met. The minimum of 32 credits may be completed at any time. Students with a baccalaureate degree(s) from an accredited institution other than Oregon State University may be granted a baccalaureate degree from OSU upon satisfying the institutional, college, and departmental requirements of the curriculum represented by the degree. Such a student also may obtain concurrent degrees from Oregon State University by satisfying the requirements for concurrent degrees. A student seeking a concurrent or subsequent baccalaureate degree(s) also must satisfy the appropriate residence requirements. Requirements for Certificates See individual certificate programs described in this catalog. Requirements for Advanced Degrees For advanced degree requirements see the Graduate School section of this catalog and the 1992-93 Graduate Catalog. Students who take courses they wish to apply toward an advanced degree before they have received baccalaureate degrees may have a limited number of credits reserved by petition. Also see Reserving Credits in the Graduate School section. A graduate student also may obtain baccalaureate degrees from Oregon State University by satisfying the requirements for subsequent degrees. APPLYING FOR GRADUATION Students should consult with their adviser to check progress toward graduation requirements. Progress will be based on the formally declared major, options, minors, degree, and other applicable requirements. Applications should be obtained and filed in the Office of the Registrar two terms before expected graduation so progress can be monitored each term. Once the application has been filed, the Office of the Registrar will audit and return two copies to the college each term-one for the adviser and one for the student. Students who wish to have minors or options shown on their transcript must indicate the minors or options they intend to complete when filing the application to graduate. It is important that the student submit the application before the final quarter so he or she has time to complete any deficiencies prior to the last quarter. Students who wish to change graduation dates after the first application must file the change in the Office of the Registrar before the final quarter. Degrees are granted at the end of any quarter, and students may attend the June Commencement Exercises if they wish. DEGREES WITH DISTINCTION Grade-point averages are computed on the basis of all work attempted at OSU. Graduates who have been in attendance at OSU for at least two years are awarded degrees with distinction as follows: Summa cum laude-3.85-4.00 GPA Magna cum laude-3.70-3.84 GPA Cum laude-3.50-3.69 GPA These distinctions are noted on diplomas. Majors, Minors, Certificates Minors: U (Undergraduate); G (Graduate) Certificates: C Degrees: B (Bachelors); M (Masters); MAIS (Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies); D (Doctorate) Minors (Undergraduate and Graduate); A Certificates; 0 Options; Degrees AGR: College of Agricultural Science; BUS: College of Business; CLA: College of Liberal Arts; ENGR: College of Engineering; FOR: College of Forestry; GS: Graduate School; HEE: College of Home Economics and Education; HHP: College of Health and Human Performance; OC: College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences; PHAR: College of Pharmacy; SCI: College of Science; VM: College of Veterinary Medicine; OSU: Interdisciplinary degree programs .cart Minors Majors/Minors/Certificates College C I Adult Education Agricultural and Resource Economics f A :0 Majors/Minors/Certificates Chinese Civil Engineering SCI Civil Engineering-Forest Engineering : AGR HEE Communication CIA Communication Studies CIA Agricultural Chemistry I AGR AGR i0 ' r AGR Agriculture AGR American Studies CLA Animal Reproduction/ Development AGR Animal Science AGR ': Education HEE Community Health HHP Comprehensive (Mathematics) O SCI Computer Engineering ENGR Computer Science ENGR Conducting: Choral (Music) HEE HEE (Music) CLA Applied Exercise and Sport Science Construction Engineering Management HHP Applied Genetics AGR Applied Health HHP Applied Mathematics SCI Applied Physics SCI Archaeology/Physical Anthropology AGR Crop Science AGR O Cultural Anthropology CIA .0 Cultural Resource Management FOR Dairy Production AGR Dietetics HEE Early Childhood Education HEE { Earth Materials SCI 1. Earth Science3 SCI L Economic Geograohv O Art CLA Art History CLA Athletic Administration 1-IHP Athletic Training HHP ; t ! : J 0 i Economics Education SCI SCI/HEE SCI ENGR AGR Elementary Education (Pre-M.A.T. in Science) AGR Engineering Physics : SCI/AGR English BUS/FOR Entomology ENGR SCI SCI Chemistry Education SCl Child and Adolescent Health (Pre-M.A.T.) SCI/AGR Chemistry HHP :r. Electrical and Electronics Engineering Biosystems Modeling Chemical Physics HEE ENGR Elementary Education Chemical Engineering SCI Engineering OSU Business Administration .. CLA/AGR/ : Electrical and Computer Bioresource Research Botany and Plant Pathology - : Elementary Education Botany - FOR OC SCI/AGR :ENGR/AGR niotecnnology ENGR HEE .0 f O CLA Crop and Soil Science Aquaculture Bioresource Engineering CIA Counseling O Applied Visual Arts Biophysics 0 : Conducting: Instrumental Applied Anthropology Biology Education t SCI Computational Physics Apparel, Interiors, Housing, and Merchandising Biology : Comparative Veterinary Medicine Anthropology Biochemistry and Biophysics MAIS Community College AGR/HEE Agricultural Sciences : :ENGR/FOR: HEE AGR Degrees : Cert: C :C: B. M U ENGR College Student Services Administration e : CLA AGR Management 8 Atmospheric Sciences College College and University Teaching Agricultural Business Apparel Design D ROTC (Agri) Business Agricultural Economics MAIS M HEE Aerospace Studies Agricultural Education Minors Degrees B C BUS Accounting' Actuarial Science U Environmental Chemistry O HEE SCI ENGR CLA SCI/AGR : AUR ENGR Environmental Geosciences SCI HHP Environmental Health and Safety 0 CLA Environmental Engineering Environmental Health O : HHP T. D 18 Majors, Minors, Certificates Minors Majors/Minors/Certificates Environmental Health Management College HHP U : Cert: 0 C Minors Degrees B: M MAIS D Health and Safety Administration . Health Care Administration Environmental Resource Interpretation FOR Environmental Science ENGR Environmental Sciences SCI Equine Production AGE Health Education : Exercise and Sport Science HHP Family Finance HEE Financial Services 0 15W, BUS AGR Fisheries/Business AGR HHP Health Science HHP 0 AGR Communication HEE Home Economics Education HEE Horticulture AGR Horticulture Science AGR Housing Design HEE Housing Services HEE Housing Studies HEE Food Quality AGR Family Studies HEE Food Science AGR Human Performance HHP Food Technology AGR Human Services. CIA Food Science and Technology AGR Individual and Family Studies Food Systems Management HEE Foods in Business HEE Family Sciences HEE Human Development and O 0 Individual Studies Industrial Engineering HEE AGR/SCI Insect Pest Management SCI literatures Integrated Science Education HEL CLA Forest Biology FOR Interdisciplinary Studies FOR Forest Engineering-Civil Engineering HEE. International Agricultural Development AGR International Agricultural O FOR Forest Management FOR International Business BUS Forest Products FOR International Studies OSU Economics Forest Recreation Landscape Design FOR FOIL General Agriculture Japanese FOR FOR French Irrigation Engineering FOR Forest Soils Language Arts Education CLA BUS General Entomology SCI ip HHP General Mathematics SCI General Rangeland Resources AGR General Science' SCI Genetics SCI Geography SCI Geological Engineering2 Geolo gy Geomorphology-Engineering Geology Geophysics German CLA FOR CLA/HEE Latin American Affairs CIA Law Enforcement FOR liberal Studies CLA Livestock Production AGR Long Term Care 0 General Health Care Administration ENGR : AGR General Business AGR : ClAJIIEE. General Anthropology Administration HHP Management BUS Management Information Systems Manufacturing Engineering J Marine Resource Management . BUS ENGR OC Marine Resources Marketing Management : Materials Science BUS ENGR ENGR Mathematical Physics SCI SCI Mathematical Sciences SCI Mathematics SCI 0 OC/SCI CLA/HEE: Gerontology HEE Health HHP O GS Interior Merchandising Forest Harvesting Forest Science : ENGR Foreign Languages and (French, German, Spanish) O O Human Development and HHP Forest Resources M HEE AGR Forest Recreation Resources : C: B HHP Fitness Program Management Management Degrees :Cart: HHP!HEE Fishery Science Forest Engineering ::G Home Economics HEE Fisheries and Wildlife Fisheries Science U HHP Health Promotion and Education Home Economics Ethnic Studies financial management College History Equine Science Family Resource Management Majors/Minors/Certlfieates A ; 0 SCI Mathematics Education SCI/HEE Mechanical Engineering ENGR Medical Technology SCI Merchandising Management HEE : ' MAIS : D Majors, Minors, Certificates Minors Malore/Mlnora/Certificates College Metallurgical Engineering2 ENGR Microbiology i !Cart: o U Degrees B: M C ROTC Mining Engineering2 ENGR Maiore/Mlnore/CeitHlcatee D College Resource Economics ° 0 Resource Geography SCI Planning Resource So CIA Museum Studies CLA Russian Studies CLA Music CLA Science Education Sc! Communication ?O CLA ROTC Nuclear Engineering ENGR Numerical Analysis (Mathematics) SCI. Nutrition HEE Nutrition and Food Management HEE Nutrition Science HEE Occupational Safety H}{P Ocean Engineering ENGR Oceanography OC Operations Research t SCI { Optical Physics Peace Studies 0 0 . O1 O A Pest Management SCI Piano Performance (Music) CIA 10 t PHAR GS CLA Poultry Science AGR Poultry Production AGR CIA Pre-Therapy HIP Pre-Veterinary Medicine AGR Psychology CIA AGR Pulp and Paper Technology FOR Pure Mathematics SCI HEE FOR - Toxicology ` 0 AGR(GS E CIA veterinary Meuiune VM Veterinary Science VM Visual Arts CLA Water Resources AGR Wildland Ecology AGR Wildlife FOR 0 M O ! ` 1. E Wildlife Resources FOR Wildlife Science AGR 0 Women Studies CIA Wood and Fiber Technology FOR 0 Wood Engineering and { O ; 0 S. 0 0 ? E 0 0 0 Science FOR Wood Industry' Management FOR Wood Industry Processes and , Management A0 O i i FOR [ Worksite Health Promotion HHP Writing CIA Writing Education. CIA Zoology SCI : E c0 10 i Radiation Health Physics 0 ENGR Range Management AGR/FOR Range Science AGR Rangeland Resources AGR Range/Forestry/Fire Management AGR Range/Soils AGR Range/Wildlife AGR Teaching Tourism 0 0 e Radiation Health Regional Studies Sustainable Ecosystems. O 0 O r SCI/EN G CLA [ FOR Public Education/Extension CIA CIA - -Public Administration SCI Studio Art Theatre Arts Pre-M.A.T. for Elementary Education R. Geophysics Twentieth Century Studies SCI Political Science O SCU' O HHP/HEE ` Plant Physiology - HHP HEE HHP AGR CIA Sports Leadership Technology Education CLA/FOR. HEE CLA/HEE Technical Field E ' Speech Communication Surveying and Mapping 0 Plant Growth and Development': AGR FOR ? so Physic Education Soil Science Oi Structure-Tectonics, 1 CLA Physics CIA 1 AGR Physical Education SCI Sociology Statistics 0 1 Pest Biology and Management Phv seal Art ,iw inns Development CIA Sedimentary Geology Spanish 0 Performance (Music) Philosophy CIA and Society CLA Pharmacy U Science, Technology, Osu Naval Science { J1111 Scientific and Technical CLA/HEE Natural Resources 1 Rural and Resource. 'Russiari Music History /Composition MATS FOR- Sty-! Music Education Degrees D. U AGR/FOR' i Planning Molecular and Cellular Biology ;Cart: Minors MATS SCI/AGR Military Science FIE - AGR SCI Pre-Professional Health Programs: O Dental Hygiene; Dentistry; l] Medical Technology; Medicine; O Nursing; Occupational Therapy; Optometry; I] Osteopathy; Pharmacy; U Physical Therapy; Podiatry; Veterinary Medicine. O O. i 1O O 'Post-baccalaureate certificate. 2iolnt program with the University of Idaho. 3No new students being admitted. , 20 Fees and Residency Requirements ESTIMATED FEE AND TUITION SCHEDULE (PER TERM) FOR 1993-94 Term credits Full-Time 12-21 credits Resident undergrads Nonresident undergrads $955.00 $2,635.00 Resident graduate students Nonresident graduate students $1,367.00 $2,198.00 101.00 170.00 9-16 credits Overtime Each additional credit 70.00 207.00 Graduate Assistants-Teaching or research assistants pay $185 a term plus $?? each overtime credit. Consult the Graduate School Office for full details. NOTE: These figures are estimates only. Fees and tuition for 1993-94 were not established at the time of publication; call the Office of Registration for current rates. REGULAR TUITION FEES Students paying regular fees are entitled to services maintained by OSU for the benefit of students. These services include use of the library; use of laboratory equipment and materials; medical attention and advice at the Student Health Center; use of gymnasium equipment, including gymnasium suits and laundry service; the student newspaper; admission to some athletic events; and admission to concerts and lectures. No reduction in fees is made to students who may not wish to use these privileges. Staff and senior citizens do not receive these services. ADVANCE TUITION DEPOSIT $200.00 New and freshmen students should expect to make an advance tuition deposit as an indication of intent to enroll. Deposits are not refundable after the due date indicated on the "intent to enroll" form mailed to newly admitted freshmen (for Fall Term only). Special Fees (subject to change without notice) Application Fee (nonrefundable), $50.00 Must accompany admission application. Late Registration Fee Students registering after scheduled registration dates of any term pay a late registration fee of $25.00 a day for the first day and $2.00 a day thereafter. Also applies to parttime students. Return-of-Check Fee, $15.00 If institutional charges are met by a check which is returned, a fee will be charged in the amount of $15.00. The late registration fee will be added to the returned check charge if the check was used to pay registration billing. Change-of-Program Fee Add, per course, $6.00 Drop, per course, $10.00 S-U change, per course, $10.00 The student pays this fee for each change in his or her official program. Reinstatement Fee, $25.00 If for any reason a student has his or her registration canceled during a term for failure to comply with the regulations of the institution, but is later allowed to continue his or her work, the student must pay the reinstatement fee. Special Examination Fee Examination for credit, per exam $40.00 Transcript Fee, first copy, $5.00 Added copies at same time, $1.00. Staff Fee (except staff auditors) per credit, $15.00 Staff members may register for courses at an $15-per-credit-hour rate. An employee whose appointment is equivalent to. 50 or more may take up to 10 credits a term at this rate. Payment of fees entitles member to instructional and library privileges only. There is no refund for a staff member withdrawing from or dropping classes. Senior Citizen Fee: Charge for special materials only Persons 65 or older may attend class on a noncredit, space-available basis. Incidental fee privileges are not provided. Micro filming Doctoral Thesis minimum, to remain and to which the person expects to return when the person leaves without intending to establish a new domicile elsewhere. 2) "Financially independent" denotes a person who has not been and will not be claimed as an exemption and has not received and will not receive financial assistance in cash or in kind of an amount equal to or greater than that which would qualify him or her to be claimed as an exemption for Federal Income Tax purposes by another person except his or her spouse for the current calendar year and for the calendar year immediately prior to the year in which application is made. 3) A "dependent" is a person who is not financially independent. Determination of Residence (580-10-030) For purposes of admission and instruction fee assessment, OSU classifies a student as Oregon resident or nonresident. In determining resident or nonresident classification, the primary issue is one of intent. If a person is in Oregon primarily for the purpose of obtaining an education, that person will be considered a nonresident. For example, it may be possible for an individual to qualify as a resident of Oregon for purposes of voting or obtaining an Oregon driver's $45.00 license and not meet the residency requireIndividual Music Lesson Fee (consult Departments established by these rules. ment of Music) per term, $100.00 to An Oregon resident is a financially inde$200.00 pendent person who, immediately prior to the term for which Oregon resident classifiDETERMINING RESIDENCY cation is requested: FOR FEE PURPOSES In determining a student's residency, the 1) Has established and maintained a domicile in Oregon of not less than 12 consecOSU Office of Admissions follows the utive months; and administrative rules of the State Board of Higher Education on residence classifica2) Is primarily engaged in activities other tion, excerpted below. than those of being a college student. RESIDENCE REQUIREMENTSFOR THOSE a) A student may be considered primarily REQUESTING RECLASSIFICATION AFTER engaged in educational activities NOVEMBER 2, 1993. regardless of the number of credits for Definitions which the student is enrolled. HowevFor the purpose of rules 580-10-030 through er, a student who is enrolled for more 580-10-045, the following words and phrasthan seven credits per semester or es mean: quarter shall be presumed to be in 1) "Domicile" denotes a person's true, fixed, Oregon for primarily educational and permanent home and place of habitapurposes. tion. It is the place where a person intends Fees and Residency Requirements b) Such period of enrollment shall not be counted toward the establishment of a bona fide domicile of one year in this state unless the student proves, in fact, establishment of a bona fide domicile in this state primarily for purposes other than educational. An Oregon resident is also a person who is dependent on a parent or legal custodian who meets the Oregon residency requirements of these rules. The criteria for determining Oregon resident classification shall also be used to determine whether a person who has moved from Oregon has established a non-Oregon m l.- residence. If institution records show that the residence of a person or the person's legal custo- dian upon whom the person is dependent is outside of Oregon, the person shall continue to be classified as a nonresident until entitlement to resident classification is shown. The burden of showing that the residence classification should be changed is on the person requesting the change. Residence Consideration Factors (58010-031) The following factors, although not necessarily conclusive or exclusive, have probative value in support of a claim for Oregon resident classification: 1) Primary engagment in activities other than those of a student and reside in Oregon for 12 consecutive months immediately prior to the beginning of the term for which resident classification is sought; 2) Reliance upon Oregon resources for financial support; 3) Maintenance of a domicile in Oregon owned by persons legally responsible for the student; 4) Acceptance of an offer of permanent employment in Oregon; and 5) Ownership by the person of his or her living quarters in Oregon. The following factors, standing alone, do not constitute sufficient evidence to affect classification as an Oregon resident: 1) Voting or registration to vote; 2) Employment in any position normally filled by a student; 3) Lease of living quarters; 4) Admission to a licensed practicing profession in Oregon; 5) Automobile registration; 6) Public records (birth and marriage records, Oregon driver's license); 7) Continuous presence in Oregon during periods when not enrolled in school; 8) Ownership of property in Oregon, or the payment of Oregon income or other Oregon taxes; or a) Domicile in Oregon of the student's spouse; Reliance upon non-Oregon resources for financial support is an inference of residency in another state. The resident classification of a dependent person shall be that of his or her parents or legal custodians, or, in case of divorce or other similar circumstances, the parent or legal custodian upon whom the person is financially dependent, unless the dependent has been in Oregon with the other parent or a legal custodian and established Oregon residency under these rules 12 months prior to the term for which Oregon resident classification is requested. Evidence of Financial Dependency (58010-033) In determining whether a student is financially dependent and whether his or her parent, or legal custodian has maintained a bona fide domicile in Oregon for one year, a student must provide: 1) Legal proof of custodianship; 2) Evidence of established domicile of parent or legal custodian; 3) Identification of the student as a dependent on the federal income tax return of the parents, or legal custodian. Additional documentation to substantiate dependency during the current calendar year may be required at a later time if deemed necessary by the institution. A student who provides evidence that he or she is a dependent of a parent or legal custodian who has maintained a one-year domicile in Oregon shall not be required to establish a one-year domicile prior to classification of resident status, provided such a student may not be classified as a resident while receiving financial assistance from another state or state agency for educational purposes. Residence Classification of Aliens (58010-040) An alien holding an immigrant visa or an A, E, G, I, or K visa, or granted refugee or political asylum status, or otherwise admitted for permanent residence in the United States is eligible to be considered an Oregon resident if OAR 580-10-030 is otherwise satisfied. The date of receipt of the immigrant visa, the date of approval of political asylum or refugee status, or the date of approval of lawful permanent residence, whichever is earlier, shall be the date upon which the 12 months and other residency requirements under OAR 580-10-030 shall begin to accrue. Notwithstanding any other rule, an alien possessing a nonimmigrant or temporary, i.e., B, C, D, F, H, J, L, or M visa cannot be classified as a resident. Changes In Residence Classification (580-10-041) If an Oregon resident student enrolls in an institution outside of Oregon and later seeks to re-enroll in an OSSHE institution, the residence classification of that student shall be reexamined and determined on the same basis as for any other person. A person whose nonresident legal custodian establishes a permanent Oregon residence as defined in OAR 580-10-030 during a term when the dependent is enrolled at an OSSHE institution, may register as a resident at the beginning of the next term. Once established, classification as a resident continues so long as the student remains in a continuous academic year enrollment in the classifying institution. A person who seeks classification as a resident under these rules shall complete and submit a notarized Residence Information Affidavit. The affidavit and all required supportive documents and materials must be submitted by the last day to register for the term in which resident status is sought. No OSSHE institution is bound by any determination of residency except by duly authorized officials under procedures prescribed by these rules including timely submittal of the notarized affadavit. 22 Fees and Residency Requirements RESIDENCE REQUIREMENTS EFFECTIVE affidavit is required to document the amount of support from parents or In Oregon, as in all other states, instruction guardians. fees at publicly supported four-year colleges 4) Location of family-Presence of family and universities are higher for nonresident (married students) and/or other relatives students than for resident students. Through in Oregon can support an intent to the payment of taxes, Oregon residents conbecome a permanent resident. tribute to the general fund of the state from 5) Ownership of real property-Owning which the legislature appropriates funds one's own home or investment property comprising the major source of support for in Oregon can support an intent to State System colleges and universities. Curbecome a permanent resident. rently, nonresident students are assessed instruction fees that approximate the full 6) Location of household goods-It is expected that all personal property will cost of instruction. have been moved to Oregon. The rules used in classifying resident status assure that only bona fide residents are 7) Filing of income tax return as an Oregon assessed the resident fee. The rules allow resident-Persons with income in Oregon only domiciled persons to be classified as are expected to file an Oregon income tax residents for tuition fee purposes. Domicile return. NOTE: Nonresident students (or is a matter of intent to establish a home at a parents of dependent students) who pay particular place and abandon another one. Oregon income or property taxes but Further, the rule requires a 12-month durareside outside the state of Oregon, are not tional residency in Oregon. In qualifying for residents for fee-payment purposes. the 12-month rule, the months must be 7) Place of vehicle and voter registrationconsecutive and continuing during which An Oregon resident usually has a vehicle only short absence of vacations (21 total licensed in Oregon, has an Oregon dridays in 12 consecutive months) are allowed. ver's license (if a driver), and if registered The rules provide a means for persons to to vote, is registered in Oregon. present evidence of action they have taken Completing the Residence Information to become permanent residents of Oregon Affidavit (available from the Office of (for reasons other than enrolling in college) Admissions) will supply most of the inforand thus be eligible to be assessed the resimation needed to determine residency dent fee through meeting the 12-month requirement as stated in OAR 580-10-030 (2). (except as required in #3). However, any documents which tend to support any factor The classification rule (580-10-030) in Sec- should be attached to the affidavit. In some tion (2) states that the determination of resi- instances, specific supporting documentadence shall be based on consideration of all tion may be requested after the affidavit has relevant objective factors. All State System been filed. residence classification officers must interAppeal: If a claim to residency is denied pret the following as well as other possibly by the residence officer, appeal may be made pertinent factors: to the Interinstitutional Review Committee 1) Abandonment of prior out-of-state resi(IRC) through that officer. Submitting addidence-This includes abandonment of tional information in writing as well as a the non-Oregon residence of the student personal appearance to present one's case to and his or her parent or guardian. the committee is permitted. Claims denied 2) History, duration, and nature of noneduby the IRC may be appealed within ten (10) cational activities in Oregon-Involvedays of the date of the mailing or other serment in Oregon life outside of being a vice of the IRC decision, to the Vice Chanstudent, such as working, homemaking, cellor for Academic Affairs or designee. The civic involvement, etc., supports an inferonly recourse to a claim denied by the ARC ence that the student is in Oregon not is the courts. solely for the purpose of obtaining an Administrative Rules Governing education. Note: Residence is not estabResidence Classification lished by mere attendance at an instituDetermination of Residence (580-10-030) tion of higher education and physical presence in the state while attending such 1) For purposes of admission and instruction fee assessment, department institutions an institution. shall classify all students (except students 3) Source of financial support, including attending a summer session) as Oregon location of source of support and resident or nonresident. amounts of support-Evidence of Oregon- 2) For this purpose, an Oregon resident is a based income, bank accounts, investperson with a bona fide fixed and permaments, etc. are expected. (Receipt, from a nent physical presence established an non-Oregon resident of support greater maintained in Oregon of not less than than the difference between resident and twelve consecutive months immediatenonresident tuition at the institution ly prior to the term for which residence where residence is sought, whether or not status is requested. Determination of resthe student is actually claimed as a depenidence includes finding it to be the place dent for tax purposes, is a strong inferwhere the person intends to remain and ence of nonresidency.) A parental to which the person expects to return UNTIL NOVEMBER 1, 1993. when leaving Oregon without intending to establish a new domicile elsewhere and shall be based on consideration of all relevant objective factors, including but not limited to abandonment of prior out-ofstate residence; history, duration, and nature of noneducational activities in Oregon; sources of financial support, including location of source of support and amounts of support; location of family; ownership of real property in Oregon; presence of household goods in Oregon; filing of Oregon income tax return as an Oregon resident; and state of vehicle and voter registration. Residence is not established by mere attendance at an institution of higher education and physical presence in the state while attending such an institution. 3) The criteria established in section 2 of this rule shall also be used to determine whether a person who has moved from the state has established a non-Oregon residence. 4) If institution records show that the residence as defined in OAR 580-10-030(2) of a person or the person's legal custodian is outside of Oregon, the person shall continue to be classified as a nonresident until entitlement to resident classification is shown. The burden of showing that the residence classification should be changed is on the person requesting the change. Residence Classification of Armed Forces Personnel (580-10-035) 1) For purposes of this rule, armed services means officers and enlisted personnel of the United States Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard. 2) Notwithstanding OAR 580-10-030, members of the armed services and their spouses and dependent children who reside in this state while assigned to duty at any base, station, shore establishment, or other facility in this state or while serving as members of the crew of a ship which has an Oregon port of shore establishment as its home port or permanent station shall be considered residents for purposes of the instruction fee. 3) An Oregon resident entering the armed services retains Oregon residence classification until it is voluntarily relinquished. 4) An Oregon resident who has been in the armed services and assigned on duty outside of Oregon must return to Oregon within sixty days after completing service to retain classification as an Oregon resident. 5) A person who continues to reside in Oregon after separation from the armed services may count the time spent in the state while in the armed services to support a claim for classification as an Oregon resident. Fees and Residency Requirements Affidavit. The affidavit must be submitted Waiver of Nonresident Instruction Fee (580-10-081) by the last day to register for the term in 1) Notwithstanding the provisions of rule which resident status is sought. 580-10-080, the following nonresident Review of Residence Classification students shall be permitted to pay instrucDecisions by IRC (580-10-045) tion fees at the same rates as Oregon resi1) An interinstitutional review committee dent students. (IRC) is established consisting of the officers determining student residence classi- ENROLLMENT OF SPOUSE fication at department institutions and a AND DEPENDENT CHILDREN member of the chancellor's staff, selected (580-10-086) by the chancellor. The member of the The spouse and dependent children of reguchancellor's staff shall serve as chairperlar Department staff members with a fullson. A majority of the members of the time equivalent of at least .50 may enroll as committee shall constitute a quorum. A majority of a quorum may make decisions. students at resident fee rates in department institutions. 2) Residence cases of unusual complexity, STUDENT EXCHANGES (580-10-085) especially where there may be conflict of rules, may be referred by an institution 1 (a) Under the WICHE student exchange residence classification officer to the IRC program, certification of students as for decision. Oregon residents for purposes of attending institutions not under 3) Any person who is aggrieved by the insti6) The dependent child and spouse of a perboard control or in other states shall tution residence classification may, within son who is a resident under section 2 of be guided by rules set forth in Division ten (10) days of the date of mailing or this rule so shall be considered an Oregon 10. In order to be considered for other service of the classification decision, resident. "Dependent child" includes any WICHE certification, the student's appeal to the IRC. An aggrieved person child of a member of the armed forces completed application must be may supply written statements to the IRC who (a) is under 18 years of age and not received by the certifying officer on or for its consideration in reviewing the case married, otherwise emancipated, or selfbefore October 15 of the year precedand may also make an oral presentation supporting, or (b) is under 23 years of age, ing admission. An application received to the IRC. The decision of the IRC shall unmarried, enrolled in a full-time course after that date in an envelope postbe final unless appealed. of study in an institution of higher learnmarked not later than October 15 will 4) A person dissatisfied with the IRC deciing, and dependent on the member for be deemed to have been received on sion may, within ten (10) days of the date over one-half of their support. the 15th. Residency shall be deterof the mailing or other service of the IRC Residence Classification of Aliens mined as of the date of the application (580-10-040) decision, appeal the IRC decision to the for WICHE certification, not as of the 1) An alien holding an immigrant visa or an Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs or date of expected admission or registraA, E, G, I, or K visa, or otherwise admitted designee. An appeal to the Vice Chanceltion to an institution. for permanent residence in the United lor:shall be in writing only. The Vice (b) Persons applying for WICHE certificaStates, is eligible to be considered an OreChancellor's decision shall be final. tion must be certified as Oregon resigon resident if OAR 580-10-030 (2) is oth- 5) A person granted a meritorious hardship dents and placed in ranked preference erwise satisfied. The date of receipt of the exception to residency under this rule order within each program. Ranked immigrant visa or the date of approval of prior to July 1, 1990, shall not lose the preference order is determined by a an alien's application for lawful permaexception solely because of the repeal of score based on the grade point average nent residence, whichever is earlier, shall the exception authorization. of all college work plus .25 times the be used for determining residence under Residents Under WICHE (580-10-047) number of years of residence in Orerule 580-10-030. A certification officer designated by the gon up to a maximum of ten years. Changes in Residence Classification board shall determine the residence classifi(580-10-041) 2 (a) The department and separate institucation of any person seeking certification as 1) If an Oregon resident student transfers toan Oregon resident, pursuant to the terms of tions may enter into agreements with individual institutions in other states an institution outside of Oregon and later the WICHE compact. Any person dissatisfied or other countries whereby resident seeks to re-enroll in a department instituwith the decision of the certification officer tion, the residence classification of that students specified by name in the Oremay appeal to the IRC. The decision of the student shall be re-examined and detergon institutions may transfer to the IRC shall be final unless further appeal is other institution, and an equal nummined on the same basis as for any other made to the Vice Chancellor for Academic person. ber of students specified by name from Affairs pursuant to OAR 580-10-045(4). the other institution may transfer to 2) If a person whose nonresident legal custothe Oregon institution with a reciprodian establishes a permanent Oregon resi- PAYMENT OF STUDENT FEES Payment of Nonresident Instruction Fee cal waiving of additional fees ordinaridence as defined in OAR 580-10-030(2) (580-10-080) ly assessed to nonresident students in during a term when the dependent is 1) All students classified as nonresidents both institutions. enrolled at a department institution, the shall pay a nonresident fee. enrolled person may register as a resident 2) Refunds of the nonresident fee may be at the beginning of the next term. granted if the student shows that the clas3) Once established, classification as a resisification previously assigned was in error, dent continues so long as the student but no such refund shall be made unless remains in continuous academic-year the student applies and submits all supenrollment in the classifying institution. porting information for residency status 4) A person who seeks classification as a resiprior to the last day to register for the dent under these rules shall complete and term in which the student seeks change of submit a notarized Residence Information status. Grades,. Regulations,, and Records 24 GRADING SYSTEM Grades The grading system consists of twelve basic grades, A, A-, B+, B, B-, C+, C., C-, D+, D, D- and F. A denotes exceptional accomplishment; B, superior; C, average; D, inferior; F, failure. Other marks are E, final examination not taken; I, incomplete; W, withdrawal; R, thesis in progress; P, pass; N, no credit; S, satisfactory (A-C-); U, unsatisfactory (D+-F). A student who has done acceptable work to the time of the final examination but does not take it will receive an E. The E may be removed upon presentation to a faculty committee of an acceptable reason for not taking the final examination. An E not removed within the first term after the student's return to the institution will be changed to an F. When the quality of the academic work is satisfactory and the scheduled final examination has been taken but a requirement of the course has not been completed for reasons acceptable to the instructor, a report of I (incomplete) may be made and additional time granted. The instructor states the deficiency and the deadline for completing the missing work on the grade roster. The additional time awarded shall in no case exceed one calendar year. To remove the I grade, the student must complete the deficiency within the allotted time and the instructor 7 1-1 will then submit the appropriate grade. If the student fails to complete the work within the allotted time the instructor has the option of either submitting a substitute grade or allowing a permanent grade of I to remain on the student's record. The I grade will have no effect on the student's grade point average. Students may withdraw from a course by obtaining the proper forms at the Registrar's Office and filing in accordance with OSU regulations; in such cases a grade of W is assigned. A student who discontinues attendance in a course without official withdrawal receives a grade of F in the course. Grade Points Grade points are computed on the basis of 4 points for each credit of A grade, 3.7 for each credit of A- grade, 3.3 for each credit of B+ grade, 3.0 for each credit of B grade, 2.7 for each credit of B- grade, 2.3 for each credit of C+ grade, 2.0 for each credit of C grade, 1.7 for each credit of C- grade, 1.3 for each credit of D+ grade, 1.0 for each credit of D grade, .7 for each credit of D- grade, and 0 for each credit of F. Marks of E, I, W, P, N, R, S, and U are disregarded in the computation of points. The grade point average (GPA) is the quotient of total points divided by total credits; total credits are the number of term credits in which grades A, B, C, D, and F are received. ACADEMIC REGULATIONS Deficiencies (Undergraduate Students) The academic deficiencies committee has discretionary authority to suspend or place on probation any student not in good standing who is not achieving profitable and creditable progress toward graduation or a minimum of 2.00 or C for both term and cumulative. Additionally, in order to be considered as making "profitable and creditable progress toward graduation," a full-time student must accumulate at least 30 graded credits (all grades except E, I, and W) in every three consecutive terms at OSU. Failure to do so may result in suspension. Parttime students (i.e., students normally registering for fewer than 12 credits) are exempt from this rule. Copies of current Probation and Suspension Policies of the Academic Deficiencies Committee may be obtained at the Registrar's Office. Probation: Any student achieving a gradepoint average below 2.00, either term or cumulative, will be placed or continued on probation (unless subject to suspension). Any student on probation may achieve good standing by earning both term and cumulative 2.00. Suspension: Most suspensions occur when a student is 12 or more points deficient (see Grade Points). If other factors so indicate, ra 09 T "% F vL `'ate. t jNy 41 Grades, Regulations, and Records (for example-three consecutive terms under 2.00 GPA) a student may be suspended with fewer than 12 points deficiency. Also, a student 12 or more points deficient for the last two or more terms may be suspended, even though he or she may have a cumulative average above 2.(X). (Hence, a student is not able to use previously earned surplus grade points to permit consistently unsatisfactory current work.) Normally, students who have not been previously suspended at OSU will be exempt from suspension for work attempted fall and winter terms. However, the existing policy will continue to apply to students not making profitable and creditable progress toward graduation. Students who have been suspended or expelled are denied all the privileges of the institution and of all organizations in any way connected with it, including on-campus continuing education courses, and are not permitted to reside in any University-recognized living group. Suspended students may be assured of being readmitted to OSU if they do one of the following: a. Complete additional course work at one or more other institutions that will balance 25 STUDENT CONDUCT REGULATIONS All students enrolled at Oregon State University are expected to conform with certain basic regulations and policies that have been developed to govern the behavior of students as members of the University community. These regulations have been formulated by the Student Conduct Committee, the Student Activities Committee, the University administration, and the State Board of Higher Education. Violations of the regulations subject a student to appropriate disciplinary or judicial action. The regulations and the procedures for disciplinary action and appeal are outlined in detail in the OSU Schedule of Classes published every academic year. STUDENT RECORDS Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, Public Law 93-380, as amended, provides that Oregon State University students have the right to inspect their education records that are maintained by Oregon State University the right to a hearing to challenge the contents of those records when they allege the records contain misleading or inaccurate information; the right to give their written consent prior to the release of their records to any person, agency, or organization other than University officials and certain authorized federal and state authorities. The Student Records Policy is printed in its entirety in the Schedule of Classes. Information about specific procedures is available upon request from 2. Students must complete all drop procedures within the first ten days of the term and withdrawal procedures within the first seven weeks of each term. Students dropping or withdrawing must notify the Veteran's Clerk in the Registrar's Office and may be subject to the noncompliance provisions of the Satisfactory Progress Standards. the OSU deficiency. 3. Students who do not meet the above b. Remain out of school for two academic provisions will be notified that they are on years during which time nothing is done to probation insofar as the Veterans Adminisincrease the deficiency. tration progress standards are concerned. If a student's deficiency is not corrected within Attendance two consecutive terms, the University will An instructor has the privilege of considernotify the Veterans Administration of his or ing class participation in arriving at a stuher unsatisfactory progress. dent's grade, but it is not intended that the Office of the Registrar. 4. Students who withdraw entirely from attendance in and of itself normally be a PROGRESS STANDARDS the University (except where there are cirfactor in measuring a student's academic FOR VETERAN STUDENTS cumstances beyond the control of the stuaccomplishment in a course. dent) will not be subject to the two-term Oregon State University students who are Other Limitations probationary period and will be reported receiving benefits from the Veterans AdminAcademic performance is not the sole criteriimmediately to the Veterans Administration on for admission to and continuation in cer- istration are subject to the Satisfactory as making unsatisfactory progress due to Progress Standards as set forth in 38 U.S.C. tain courses and programs at the University, section 1674, 1724, 1775, and 1776, in addi- withdrawal. Recertification will be made such as practicum courses and internships. when the student is granted readmission to The University may find it necessary to eval- tion to those established by the University the University. uate a person's background to determine his as published in the Academic Regulations. 5. Students determined as making unsatThe following apply only to students who or her likelihood of maintaining standards isfactory progress will be recertified upon of professional conduct that are necessary in are receiving VA benefits including obtaining the written approval of the VA Reservists under Chapter 106: the academic discipline or profession. An 1. Students must complete with a passing Counseling Service or adjudicator at the VA's evaluation may take into consideration current performance as well as past experiences grade (A through D-, I, P, R, S) and an overall Portland regional office. A certificate of eligibility of such consent must be presented to and actions that could affect a student's abil- term grade-point average greater than 2.00 the Veterans' Clerk. An exception to the the following number of credits in courses ity to perform in the particular course or above will exist for students who are susspecifically required for the student's major program. pended from the University and are granted based upon the term's VA certification: reinstatement by the University's academic Undergraduate Students deficiencies committee. Full-time-12 credits 6. Students dismissed from the UniversiThree-quarter time-9 credits ty for unsatisfactory conduct will be reportOne-half time-6 credits ed as making unsatisfactory progress. Only Graduate Students upon rescission of the dismissal by the UniFull-time-9 credits versity will recertification be made. Three-quarter time-7 credits One-half time-5 credits 26 Financial Aid Oregon State EXPENSES University's financial aid program provides For the 1993-94 academic year, expenses are listed below. (Tuition and fees will be set by the State Board of Higher Education at a later date and are subject to change without notice.) assistance and advice to students who would be unable to pursue their education at the University without such help. Scholarships, grants, loans, and part-time employment are available singly or in various combinations to meet the difference between what the student and the student's family could reasonably be expected to provide and the expected cost of attending OSU. Resident Tuition and fees Board and room Books and supplies Miscellaneous Nonresident $2,691 3,312 543 2,244 $8,790 $6,972 3,312 543 2,253 $13,080 Graduate students tuition is $3666 for Oregon residents and $5832 for nonresidents. Additional allowances are made for students with dependents for child care costs. Miscellaneous includes such items as transportation, clothing, laundry, cleaning, medical and dental expenses, organizations, recreation, and personal supplies. Miscellaneous costs allow the student flexibility in spending priorities. ELIGIBILITY To qualify for financial aid, a student must demonstrate financial need, be a U.S. citizen or have an immigrant visa, and be enrolled as a full-time student. The only exception is for part-time students (6-11 credit hours) who qualify for Pell Grant and Stafford Loan. Financial aid is not available to students who plan to attend OSU only during summer term. In applying for financial aid, a student is required to submit a financial aid application to one of the financial aid processing centers. Ay application submitted will be accepted by OSU. These services use a fair and uniform analysis system based on a student's family income, assets, and other resources to determine need. Upon receiving the financial data from the needs analysis service, the financial aid staff determines a student's eligibility for financial aid funds. Once students establish eligibility for financial aid, they will be awarded aid, provided they meet the deadlines stipulated below and are willing to accept the package as provided by the OSU Financial Aid Office. Of the financial aid applications received by OSU by March 1, 1992, for the 1992-93 academic year, 60 percent of the eligible applicants received some form of financial assistance. APPLICATION PROCEDURES Returning OSU students may request application forms from the Financial Aid Office. Transfer students can pick up an application from their current college or university. Entering freshmen should obtain application forms from their high schools. Applications are generally available from high schools in early November and from the OSU Financial Aid Office in early December. The suggested deadline for submitting the financial aid application is February 1. The processed analysis must be received at OSU by March 1 Perkins Loan, All-Campus Scholarships, grants, and College Work-Study consideration. Applications received after that date are considered for grant and loan funds that are available. With the exception of the Stafford Guaranteed Student Loan Program, students apply for All-Campus scholarships, grants, loans, and College Work-Study on a single application form. On the financial aid application, students should indicate they want a copy of the need analysis sent to Oregon State University. A separate application is required for the Stafford Guaranteed Student Loan, which is processed throughout the year. Applications and instructions are available from the OSU Financial Aid Office. Students transferring from another college or university must supply the OSU Financial Aid Office with financial aid records (Financial Aid Transcript) from all schools previously attended. This important requirement must be met even if a student did not receive financial aid from the previous school. TYPES OF AID The aid programs described below are available to undergraduates only. Graduate students are eligible only for Perkins Student Loans, College Work-Study, and Stafford Guaranteed Student Loans. Graduate students should apply through their departments for assistantships and research grants. The provisions of financial aid programs are subject to change without notice based on final determination of the regulations by the federal government. All figures used in these sections are estimates for 1992-93. GRANTS Each of the following is a grant which is not repaid by the student. Pell Grant Eligibility for the Pell Grant is restricted to undergraduates enrolled at least half time (6 credit hours a term). The maximum award is $2,400 (full time). Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant (SEOG) Eligibility for the SEOG is restricted to undergraduates enrolled full time in a degree program who demonstrate a high need for financial assistance and are Pell eligible. The amount of the award varies from year to year according to the availability of funds. The maximum award during 1992-93 was $200 a term. State Need Grant (SNG)/Cash Award (SCA) Undergraduates who are permanent residents of Oregon are eligible for this grant. The amount of the award varies from year to year according to the availability of funds. (For the 1992-93 academic year, the awards ranged from $360 to $966.) The maximum number of terms a student can receive this grant is twelve quarters. This KEITH MCCREIGHT Director EMILIO VEJIL Associate Director REBECCA MARTINEZ Associate Director Financial Aid grant will transfer with the student to other eligible institutions in Oregon. (An awardee cannot receive a state grant if enrolled in a course of study leading to a degree in theology, divinity, or religious education.) SCHOLARSHIPS Scholarships administered by the Financial Aid Office are based on financial need and scholastic ability. The University's financial aid committee coordinates the scholarships. Students who submit a financial aid application by the suggested deadline of February 1, 1993 will be considered for the All-Campus scholarships for which they qualify. Eligibility is restricted to undergraduates who have completed fewer than 12 terms and are enrolled full-time. Most academic units offer some scholarships that are not based on financial need; students should contact those departments directly. Other sources of private scholarships are local service clubs, industries, and other groups. Graduate students should contact their department for information on assistantships, fellowships, and graduate scholarships. $8,500 a year for a maximum total of $65,500. (The maximum total for graduate or professional students includes loans obtained as undergraduates and postbaccalaureates.) Each bank may establish its own loan limit within these guidelines. Since October 1, 1992 the interest rate for Stafford Loans is a variable rate that will be reset annually and capped at 9%. The total loan amount must be repaid within 10 years. The federal government pays the interest until repayment begins for the student. Repayment begins 6 months following graduation or when the student ceases to be enrolled at least half-time. Deferment provisions are available as defined under federal regulations. PLUS/SLS LOAN M Emergency Loans The Financial Aid Office maintains a short- term emergency loan fund for continuing students attending at least half time and those who have been admitted for the subsequent fall term. Emergency loans up to a maximum of $300 are available to meet temporary needs during an academic term. There is a $9 service charge. The loan must be repaid by the end of each term. COLLEGE WORK STUDY The work-study program provides part-time employment during the summer and academic year. Undergraduates and graduate students enrolled full time in a degree-granting program are considered for eligibility based on the financial aid application. A student may not work more than 30 hours (average) This loan is available to independent under- a week during school. The pay rate varies from minimum wage to $7.00 an hour, graduate and graduate students officially depending on the job. The maximum award admitted and enrolled at OSU and to pardepends on realistic earnings and eligibility ents of dependent undergraduate students. as determined by need analysis. Most jobs Applications are available from OSU or the are on campus or in the Corvallis combanks that participate in this program. munity. Applications must first be submitted to the Financial Aid Office for preliminary processing. A processing fee is charged by the bank. EMPLOYMENT LOANS Independent undergraduate students may Many students who do not qualify for workEach of the following is a loan which must borrow the SLS Loan for up to $4,000 for the study find part-time employment during the be repaid by the student. year to cover a portion of their educational first two years and $5,000 annually for subPerkins expenses. The Financial Aid Office lists any sequent years for a maximum total of (Undergraduates, and graduate students part-time job that a department, agency, or $23,000. Graduate students may borrow enrolled full time in a degree program are individual wishes to post. Students can also $10,000 annually for a maximum of eligible for this loan. During the freshman contact other departments, offices, and busi$73,000 (includes undergraduate amounts nesses to seek employment. Application for and sophomore years, a student may borrow borrowed). up to $4,500; through the junior and senior part-time work should usually be made after Parents may borrow up to the full cost of years, a student may borrow a total of registration to avoid schedule conflicts. attendance for each child who is at least a $9,000; and through graduate study, a stuhalf-time dependent undergraduate student. RESOURCE EXPECTATIONS dent may borrow up to $18,000 total. The Beginning October 1, 1992, the interest When students choose to attend college, maximum loan per year at OSU depends on rate for the SLS is variable and reset annualthey assume the responsibility of paying for funds available, the student's year in school, ly, with an 11% cap; the PLUS Loan interest their education. Tax-supported aid programs and amounts previously borrowed. The rate is variable and reset annually, with a exist to supplement their efforts, not to maximum amount for the 1992-93 academ10% cap. Parents begin repayment within ic year was $1,800. replace them. Certain efforts are expected of 60 days after receipt of the loan funds. Stueach student. Interest on this loan (at the rate of 5 perdent borrowers may receive a deferment of cent) begins six or nine months after the Summer and Academic Year Employment repayment if they are full-time students. student ceases to attend school at least half Students who register full time for summer time. The repayment period is ten years. The ADDITIONAL LOAN PROGRAMS term and the academic year are expected to OSU Student Loans payment schedule is set on a monthly or contribute minimum employment earnings Loans based on the financial need analysis quarterly basis, depending upon the loan for each term they plan to enroll. balance. application are available to students in good Summer Employment Students may defer payment if they serve standing at the University who have comIf students do not attend school full time in in the military, the Peace Corps, or VISTA; if pleted at least one term at OSU. The borrow- the summer, they are expected to work and ing maximum is $1,000. Interest is charged they return to school after an absence; or if use their earnings for school. Exceptions to they are temporarily disabled. at 7 percent annually on any unpaid balthe earnings expectations are made only for ance. Repayment can be made at any time Stafford Guaranteed Student Loan very unusual circumstances. but must begin nine months after a student This loan is available to undergraduates, Parent Contribution leaves college or is enrolled less than full postbaccalaureate students, and graduate The parents of dependent students are students officially admitted to OSU. Applica- time. A cosigner is required for all students. expected to assume part of the responsibility OSU students, spouses, staff, and faculty are for their son's or daughter's education, if tions are available from the student's home not eligible to act as cosigners. bank or from the OSU Financial Aid Office. financially able. The information provided Other Loans An origination fee is charged by the bank. by them on the financial aid application is Undergraduate and postbaccalaureate stu- A number of OSU students qualify for loan used to determine financial strength and dents may borrow up to $2,625 annually for programs made available by private donors ability to contribute. (It does not attempt to the first year and $3, 500 for the second year and trust accounts. Students not eligible for measure willingness to contribute.) Factors and $5,500 annually for subsequent study other types of aid, or in need of more assisconsidered include size of family, number of tance than provided through other sources, for a maximum total of $23,000. Graduate family members in college, age of parents, may contact the Financial Aid Office about or professional students may borrow up to medical costs, nonconsumer debts, and these loans. assets. If parents are unable to provide the 28 Financial Aid expected contribution, it may be possible to AWARD NOTIFICATION obtain a Parent Loan (PLUS) as a replaceWhen the Financial Aid Office has determent. mined the kind and amount of aid for Student's Assets which a student qualifies, the student will Students are expected to use 35% of their be notified by letter of the award. This letter assets each year for the cost of attending will also stipulate the conditions of the OSU. Assets may include savings, stocks and award. bonds, property, trust funds, and money REPAYMENT POLICY market accounts. Students who withdraw from Oregon State Other Resources. Students are expected to University prior to completion of a term use all their available resources such as veterans' benefits, child support, Aid to Depen- must repay to OSU a portion of financial aid received through Perkins Loan, Pell, SEOG, dent Children funds, loans or cash gifts from relatives or friends, or any other funds and State Need Grant programs. The portion received from any source. All known of financial aid which must be repaid is calresources should be reported on the applica- culated based on the date of withdrawal and tion. Later, students should report resource the amount of aid money remaining after changes of $100 or more to the Financial tuition and fees are paid. The amount of aid Aid Office as soon as possible. received is multiplied by the percent of federal aid received from the programs listed COST MINUS RESOURCES above and the percent the student must EQUALS NEED repay listed below. Aid repaid is applied to Once a student applies for and establishes the programs in the order listed above. eligibility for financial aid, he or she is The cash disbursement repayment policy awarded an amount that supplements his or is as follows: her ability to pay educational costs. This Percent Week of amount is based on an evaluation of the student repays classes total cost for the terms attended minus the 75 1 total amount of resources available to the 75 2 student during that period of time. 50 3 The Aid Package 50 4 Once a student's need has been determined, 25 5 an aid package will be developed that 25 6 depends on the availability of funds and the 0 7 amount of need in relation to other students. The Financial Aid Office attempts to STUDENT RIGHTS AND meet a student's full need, but doing so is RESPONSIBILITIES not always possible. Students who complete Academic Progress Requirements their applications after the February 1 dead- Financial aid recipients are required by reguline may not receive all the aid they need lation to maintain satisfactory academic because of insufficient funds. It may not be progress in order to continue to receive aid. possible to meet the needs of students who Undergraduate and postbaccalaureate stuindicate that they do not wish to accept cer- dents attending full-time are required to suctain types of aid or students with extremely cessfully complete at least 36 credits for the high needs (over $5,000) because of maxiacademic year; full-time graduate students mum limits within individual aid programs. must successfully complete at least 27 credReceiving a scholarship may not have an its. Letter grades of F, U, N, I, and E do not effect on a student's aid if he or she is not apply. In addition, a student must meet the receiving funds from Perkins Loan, Stafford University's academic regulations outlined Loan, SEOG, or College Work-Study. Stuunder the section entitled Academic Reguladents receiving aid from any of these protions. Failure to meet these minimum grams are limited to a maximum amount of requirements may result in cancellation of aid. A student whose full need has been met aid for subsequent terms or school years. prior to receipt of a scholarship will have his Prior to disbursement each quarter, a stuor her aid reduced by an amount equal to dent's aid may be withheld or the student the scholarship; the reduction will usually may be placed on probation based on prior be made from the loan or from work-study. academic performance. Should aid be withIf a student's full need had not been met, held for academic reasons, the student will the scholarship can be allowed to fill the be requested to explain in writing the reaunmet need. The scholarship may not sons he or she did not achieve the minireplace the family contribution. Each stumum standard. A decision on continuing dent's situation is treated individually. aid will be made by the financial aid staff. Decisions may be appealed first to the director of financial aid, the financial aid committee, and then to the dean of students. Detailed information outlining requirements is contained in student materials. Change In Status Students must notify the Financial Aid Office if they withdraw from the University during a term or do not register for a term. Changes in family status should also be reported (marriage, separation, divorce, childbirth). Reporting of Other Resources A financial award may be canceled at any time if there is evidence that the statement of financial conditions was misrepresented on the application. Students must inform the Financial Aid Office promptly of any significant changes ($100 or more) in the information originally submitted. Funding Statement Awards may be adjusted during the year by the Financial Aid Office because of inadequate institutional, state, or federal funding, or other unforeseen factors such as changes in student attrition or percentage of award acceptance. Renewal of Financial Aid Students must reapply each year for continued aid. Oregon State University is not obligated to continue aid beyond the last term stated on the award letter. Applications received after the preferred March 1 deadline may not receive full consideration for all programs because of lack of funds. Renewal of financial aid depends on the student's academic performance, financial need, and the availability of student financial aid funds. Disbursement Procedures Each term, approved grants and scholarships will be credited on the student's billing statement. Loans are disbursed by separate checks and are available at the beginning of each term for student's pickup. College Work-Study earnings are paid each month by check for hours worked in the previous monthly pay period. Appeals Students who are dissatisfied with a decision of a financial aid staff member may appeal that decision, either in person or in writing, to the following persons in the order indicated: the Director of Financial Aid, the Financial Aid Appeals Subcommittee, and the Dean of Students. Many different types of scholarships are available to students at OSU. Contact individual colleges and departments, and the Financial Aid Office for additional information, application forms, and listings of scholarships. Criteria and amounts of scholarships listed are subject to change without notice. N 1 I1 COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS Listed below are scholarships and awards currently available in the various departments and programs within the College of Liberal Arts. Applications may be submitted for some, while others are selected by the appropriate faculty. If you have any questions, please contact the department concerned. Dean's Scholarship In the Liberal Arts Funding equivalent to in-state tuition but open to both in-state and out-of-state students. Awarded annually on the basis of academic achievement to a student enrolled in the College of Liberal Arts. Anthropology Thomas C. Hogg Memorial Scholarship $600 for a foreign student who is a first-year graduate student. Contact Department of Anthropology, Waldo Hall 238. Kalervo Oberg Award Presented annually to the outstanding senior in anthropology; in memory of the late Dr. Kalervo Oberg, distinguished American anthropologist. Art Most scholarships in the Department of Art require achievement in the studio arts and excellence as demonstrated by a portfolio of students' work. Criteria generally includes financial need. For more information, contact the Department of Art, Fairbanks Hall 105. Raleigh Clare Dickinson Memorial English Scholarship Fine Art Award in Painting $100 for a junior, $200 for a sophomore. $500 for an outstanding English major based on extraordinary academic promise. Hollands Memorial Art Scholarship Bernard Malamud Memorial Scholarship $400. First priority for a female. Rachel and Harold Hollands Grant A $150 grant awarded for Fall term to a woman art major in memory of Rachel Hollands. Award based on financial need, scholastic achievement, good character, and U.S. citizenship. Ida M. Matsen Memorial Art Scholarship Approximately $500 awarded to a high school senior who shows exceptional talent in literature and writing, and intends to major in English at OSU. Mary Holaday Murray Scholarship in English $1000 for freshman, sophomore, or junior based on extraordinary academic promise. Herbert Nelson Memorial Award $600 scholarship for an undergraduate student. $200 to a graduating senior of outstanding promise as a high school English teacher. Matsen-Davidson Scholarship Sigurd H. Peterson Memorial Scholarship $1800 for a freshman or sophomore. Norma Seibert Scholarship Full in-state tuition for a junior or senior with superior academic achievement. $1800 for a student interested in printmaking. English Criteria for English Department scholarships generally based on academic performance, with a minimum GPA of 3.50 in English classes. Financial need not a factor. For more Robert Schwartz Essay Award information, contact the Department of $300 in awards to two history majors whose seminar papers have the potential for publication. English, Moreland Hall 240. Mary Jo Bailey Memorial Fellowship $100. Preference for women with the goal of teaching college-level English. $100 for best essay submitted as part of an English course Roger Weaver Poetry Award $100 for best poems submitted to contest. History Arthur E. Gravatt Award Robert Wayne Smith Book Award A $20 credit toward book purchase (other pi rr//II ' V- :; 9 4 a-.r. _t_ I u El Scholarships than textbooks) for as many as ten students. Awarded by the Department of History, in cooperation with OSU Bookstores. Selection honors authors of the best research papers or review essays submitted in history courses during the academic year. Music Most scholarships in the Music Department are based on performance ability and achievement. Financial need generally not a factor. For additional information and application forms, contact the Department of Music, Benton Hall, Room 200. George V. Bolton, Jr. Memorial Scholarship First priority to males studying organ. Alice Dilworth Memorial Scholarship $300 to an outstanding senior. Kathleen Byrne Freeman Memorial Scholarship $1000 to a student specializing in vocal music. Music Education Award Presented annually to the outstanding senior in music education. Music Tuition Scholarship Partial to full-tuition. Application includes audition of musical talent. Lois & Wait Rising Scholarship For undergraduate students with no less than a B in any music course. Philosophy Franklin J. Matchette Award $100 awarded each spring term by the Department of Philosophy to an undergraduate for excellence in the study of philosophy. Franklin J. Matchette Prize $100 presented each spring term by the Department of Philosophy for an outstanding undergraduate essay in philosophy. Psychology Psychology Scholar Award Quarterly award of $100 for books to junior or senior psychology major with a GPA of 3.5 or above. Recipient selected by department faculty. Sociology Sociology Scholarship Awards Through the generous donations of the friends of the Department of Sociology, partial support may be available to deserving students in good academic standing. Contact the Sociology Department for additional information. Speech Communication apparent promise of continuing contribution, and financial need. Not offered every year. Women Studies Judy M. Memorial Scholarship $1500. Based on commitment to feminist ideals, community service or activism, need, and achievement. Contact Department of Women Studies, Social Science Hall 111. Sally Hacker Memorial Women's Research Fund Awarded only to undergraduate students at OSU, with preference given to returning women students in the College of Liberal Arts. Grants shall be to assist research related to women's issues and the dissemination of research results. COLLEGE OF SCIENCE Unless otherwise stated below, students must have at least 30 credits at OSU to qualify. For additional information on science scholarships and application forms, contact the College of Science, Kidder Hall 128. Any Science Major John M. Blanchard Memorial Scholarship $300 to an entering freshman with preference given to students from Sweet Home High School. Contact Sweet Home High School for more information and application form. G. V. Copson Memorial Scholarship Milton Harris Scholarships $500 to outstanding students in Chemistry with at least a GPA of 3.50. Entomology Undergraduate Entomology Scholarship $250 to the top Entomology student. Geography Christian Hunt Memorial Scholarship Approximately six scholarships of $320 awarded annually to undergraduate students with a high degree of personal integrity, honesty, and respect of other people. Intended for students who cannot qualify for other assistance. Geology Samuel Evans, Jr. Memorial Scholarship Approximately $300 for a sophomore or junior who has demonstrated evidence of scholarship and professional motivation. Earl L. Packard Achievement Award $300 for a senior based on academic achievement and service to the Department and profession. Math Harry E. Goheen Memorial Book Award Approximately $300 to a junior or senior with first priority to under-represented minority students. Paul Copson Memorial Scholarships Dean's Scholarship in the Natural Sciences Approximately $500 to a junior or senior with good character and a minimum GPA of 3.50. Microbiology Full resident tuition for a student in the College of Science with outstanding academic Thomas R. Aspitarte Memorial Scholarship in Microbiology excellence. $450 for a junior or senior majoring in environmental microbiology. Approximately $500 to a junior or senior with a GPA of at least 3.50 overall. Margaret Dowell-Gravatt, M.D., Scholarship $1000 for a sophomore, junior, or senior majoring in microbiology, zoology, or prehealth, with first priority to female, ethnic minority. Financial need and minimum overall GPA of 2.50 and science GPA of 3.0 required. Helen A. Hays Women in Microbiology Scholarship Jesse Hanson Scholarships Approximately one-half in-state tuition to a junior majoring in microbiology. Approximately $500 to students with high scholarship, potential for success, unimpeachable character, service to the university through contributions to campus life (about First priority to undergraduate women. Mark H. Middlekauf Memorial Scholarship Full in-state tuition for a junior or senior. Joseph E. Simmons Memorial Scholarship Physics Paul Copson Memorial Scholarship 15 given). Approximately $500 to a junior or senior with good character and a minimum GPA of Biochemistry/Biophysics 3.50. Bend Research Scholarship Physiology $500 for an outstanding biochemistry/biophysics student from central Oregon. Hugo Krueger Zoology Fellowship Awards to students who are full-time residents of Oregon and pursuing studies in broadcasting. Students must be in their second year of broadcast studies. Not offered every year. Milton Harris Scholarships Biology For a graduate student studying physiology. Premedical Program All scholarships for students studying premed are based on financial need and a minimum GPA of 3.50. Barney Keep Scholarship Fund C.R. Herrick Memorial Scholarship Alumni Physician Scholarship $300 to a senior majoring in biology. Chemistry Approximately $1000 to a senior accepted to medical school. William J. Ingram Memorial Fellowship Ralph Bosworth Memorial Scholarship Don Butler Memorial Scholarship Provides an award to a graduating senior in the Department of Speech Communication. Not offered every year. D. Palmer Young Memorial Drama Scholarship In-state tuition for one term (not necessarily awarded every year). Selection by the theater arts faculty, based on student's involvement in and commitment to the theater program, the $500 to outstanding students in biochemistry/biophysics with at least a GPA of 3.50. $500 for a first-year graduate student based on scholarship, research progress, and progress on cumulative exams. Approximately $1000 to a senior accepted to medical school. Augustin & Rita Gombart Medical Scholarship Approximately $500 for a junior or senior. Scholarships Preprofesslonal Program Dora Krueger Memorial Scholarship A number of awards of approximately $750 each for sophomores, juniors, or seniors majoring in preveterinary medicine. Must have completed 75 credit hours at the close of winter term. Statistics Lyle D. Calvin Scholarship $1000 to a student majoring in statistics. Ruth Krueger Scholarship $1000 to an undergraduate or graduate student majoring in statistics. COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES Agricultural Honors scholarships are for entering students with a record of leadership. Student must have been in the top 10 percent of their high school class, or have a community college transfer GPA of 3.50. For additional information about Agricultural Honors scholarships or non-major specific Agricultural Sciences scholarships, contact Charles E. & Clara Marie Eckelman Memorial Fellowship $10,000 to graduate students, with first priority to students majoring in food microbiology with an emphasis on the dairy industry. Equal weight for selection placed on scholastic performance; need; and qualities of citizenship, leadership, character, and participation in campus and community events. Four fellowships, with one going to each of the following departments: Microbiology, Food Science & Technology, Animal Sciences, and Agricultural & Approximately $1000. Resource Economics. it. EOSC Old field Scholarship For students registered within the OSU Agricultural Program at Eastern Oregon State College. For more information, contact Larry Larson, EOSC. Eugene Fisher Agricultural Honors Scholarship Approximately $1000. H. H. Gibson Memorial Scholarship Liz Webb, Ag Academic Programs, Strand Ag Hall 137. Any Agricultural Sciences Major $500 for a freshman with financial need. Must be a graduate of an Oregon high school who has completed work in vocational agriculture. Leo Anderson, Jr. Memorial Scholarship in Extension Education less Hanson Scholarship Approximately $2800 divided three or four ways for graduate or undergraduate students based on academic achievement, leadership skills, and experience in Extension related activities. Don Burlingham Memorial Scholarship This can be awarded to an incoming freshman or an undergraduate within the College of Agricultural Sciences. Preference will be given to Benton County High School graduates. Malcolm Johnson Memorial Scholarship Tuition paid for a junior or senior with financial need. Also based on qualities of citizenship, leadership, character, and participation in campus/community activities. Approximately $1000 for a student from Crook, Deschutes, or Jefferson counties in central Oregon. Based on financial need, scholastic standing, and leadership. Frank Burlingham Memorial Agricultural Lawrence E. Kaseberg Memorial Scholarship Honors Scholarship Two scholarships of $1000 offered to entering students. Preference for students from the Woodburn, Oregon area. Karla Chambers Leadership Agricultural Honors Scholarship Approximately $1000. Paul Culbertson Memorial Scholarship Tuition paid for an undergraduate student with financial need. Preference for students from Jackson County, Oregon. Charles E. & Clara Marie Eckelman Memorial Scholarship Full-tuition and fees to juniors or seniors, with first priority to students majoring in food microbiology with an emphasis on the dairy industry. Equal weight for selection placed on scholastic performance; need; and qualities of citizenship, leadership, character, and participation in campus and community events. Five scholarships, with one going to each of the following departments: Microbiology, Food Science & Technology, Animal Science, Agricultural Business, and Agricultural & Rescource Economics. Clifford Smith Memorial Agricultural Honors Scholarship Herb & Anita Summers Agricultural Honors Scholarship Approximately $1000. James Thomas Memorial FFA Scholarship $500 for an entering student who is a member of FFA. Doris M. Tibbets Memorial Scholarship For a sophomore, junior, or senior who is a well-rounded individual with drive and spirAgricultural & Resource Economics For additional information and application forms, contact Cheryl Kolbe, Key Adviser, AREC, Ballard Extension 200B. LeRoy Breithaupt Memorial Scholarship For a junior or senior based on financial need, academic achievement, and overall University involvement. Agricultural Cooperative Council of Oregon Scholarship Award Junior or senior in agricultural economics with an interest in farm cooperatives and agricultural business management. Agricultural Business Management Scholarship Agricultural Business Management major with junior or senior standing with a sincere purpose and goal to work in some area of agricultural business management, agricultural interest and leadership potential, financial need and scholastic standings considered but not deciding factors. William P. 'Chip' Harris Memorial Scholarship For sophomore, junior, or senior residents of Benton County. Must have attended high school for at least two years in Benton County. $1000 to an entering student who has clear potential for career advancement. Priority for student with GPA of 3.80 and above. Hollands Memorial Agricultural Economic Ursula Bolt Knaus Memorial Scholarship Scholarship A number of scholarships totaling approximately $ 7000 awarded annually to undergraduate students in Agricultural Sciences or Engineering. $500. First priority for students based on financial need, scholarship, good character, and U.S. citizenship. Ermine & Norma Potter Memorial Scholarship Earl Meier Memorial Dairy Science Scholarship Several scholarships of undergraduate students based on financial need, scholarship, and overall University involvement. Intended for students whose activities have made a contribution to the Department. Approximately $750 to a junior or senior with an interest in dairy production or dairy science. Naumes Family Agricultural Honors Scholarship Approximately $1000. Northwest Food Processors Association Scholarship A number of scholarships at $1000 each awarded annually to juniors or seniors with a strong interest and potential to pursue a career in agribusiness, especially one focusing on a discipline which supports food processing operations. Ben & Ethel Pubols Memorial Scholarship For an undergraduate or graduate student. Split on a rotation between Agricultural Sciences and Home Economics. Oregon Chapter: American Society of Farm Managers and Rural Appraisers Award $500 for a sophomore or junior in agricultural economics with an interest in farm management and rural appraising, high scholastic accomplishments, demonstrated leadership and service attitudes, and a resident of Oregon. Oregon Society of Farm Managers and Rural Appraisers Award $500 for a sophomore or junior in agricultural economics with an interest in farm management and rural appraising, high scholastic accomplishments, demonstrated leadership and service attitudes, and a resident of Oregon. 32 Scholarships Animal Science For additional information and application forms, contact Dale Weber, Key Advisor, Animal Science, Withycombe Hall 310. R. L. Clark Scholarship The scholarship is for one term students enrolled in Animal Science. Amount varies. The aim is to encourage students to pursue studies in livestock production and the processing of meat. Hogg-Hubbard Fellowship $1000 for a graduate student based on interest and experience in the sheep industry. Minimum GPA of 3.00. Financial need considered only when otherwise equally qualified candidates. I. R. Jones Memorial Book Award $75 for a student studying animal science with an emphasis on dairying. L. A. McClintock Farm Scholarship One-term's tuition for an outstanding junior. Jack Miller Scholarship $500 to an individual in animal science. Oregon Fryer Commission Scholarship Arthur King Memorial Scholarship Tuition plus $500 annual book allowance for sophomore, junior, senior, or graduate student with financial need and a true love of the subject of crop and soil science. McGuire Crop Science Scholarship For an undergraduate student with financial need. Wilbur Powers Memorial Scholarship For undergraduate students. Harry A. Schoth Memorial Scholarship Three awards annually for juniors or seniors with financial need and a minimum 3.00 GPA. Contact Liz Webb, Ag Academic Programs, Strand Ag Hall 137. Loren J. Smith Memorial Agricultural Honors Scholarship $1000 to an entering student based on leadership. Contact Liz Webb, Ag Academic Programs, Strand Ag Hall 137. Robert H. Warrens Memorial Scholarship For a junior or senior in courses related to farm crops and soil conservation. James H. Weatherspoon Memorial Scholarship $1000 to an undergraduate student in the poultry program with financial need. Must be a U.S. citizen with Oregon residence. Additional consideration given to students with previous experience with or relationship to Oregon Broiler Industry members. For a junior or senior with financial need and an interest in agronomy. Priority for individuals from Baker, Wallowa, or Union Counties. Harry A. Schoth Memorial Scholarship forms, contact Bob Jarvis, Key Advisor, Fisheries Science & Wildlife Science, Nash Hall For a junior or senior with financial need and a minimum GPA of 3.00. Crop & Soil Science For additional information and application form, contact Roger Fendall, Key Advisor, Crop & Soil Science, Crop Science Building 153. L. L. Anderson, Jr. Memorial Scholarship in Soil Science For undergraduate or graduate student based on scholarship, leadership, and experience in Extension or possible future in Extension. M. Dale Chipman Memorial Scholarship For undergraduate students from Oregon or Idaho with financial need. 1. Ritchie Cowan Memorial Fellowship For International graduate students with financial need whose interest is in agronomy. Crop Science Scholarship For an undergraduate student with financial need. Fisheries Science & Wildlife Science For additional information and application 104. Roland E. Dimick Memorial Scholarship $500 for a sophomore based on freshman year academic performance. Hugo Krueger Fellowship $1000 to a graduate student for research associated with fish physiology. H. E. Mastin Memorial Scholarship Three scholarships of $1000 to entering freshmen based on academic performance and financial need. Food Science & Technology For additional information and application forms, contact Dan Farkas, Key Advisor, Food Science & Technology, Wiegand Hall 108. Paul Krumperman Memorial Scholarship Ernest Wiegand Memorial Scholarship $500 to a senior based on scholarship, leadership activities, and professional interests/development. $500 to a graduate teaching assistant. General Agriculture/Agricultural Education For additional information and application form, contact Lee Cole, Lead Advisor, General Agriculture/Agricultural Education, Strand Ag Hall 112. Gary McKenzie Agricultural Scholarship For an undergraduate student, with priority to freshman. First preference for FFA members from a Eugene, Oregon high school. Must have interest in technical agriculture and show performance, character, and leadership through FFA projects. Horticulture Along with other criteria, horticulture scholarships are based on financial need. For additional information and application forms, contact Anita Green, Key Adviser, Department of Horticulture, ALS 4155. Rolland Beglau Memorial Scholarship $500 for an undergraduate student, with first consideration to individuals who have an Oregon farm background, 4-H, or FFA horticulture experiences. A love and enthusiasm for the production of vegetables and fruit crops is the foremost criteria. Wilbur Burkhart Memorial Scholarship For an undergraduate student with an interest in horticulture. Endicott Farms Undergraduate Scholarship A $500 award for a student majoring in horticulture with an emphasis in vegetables. Selection criteria are financial need and promise. Bruce Faddis Memorial Scholarship In-state tuition for up to three terms for a senior pursuing a career as a golf course superintendent. Must have significant practical experience at golf courses and demonstrate a commitment to the industry via activities in and out of classes, and have involvement with turf projects at the LewisBrown farm. Oregon Dairy Industries Memorial Scholarship A $1000 award to a junior or senior full-time student intending to enter fresh fruit and vegetable industry in an area between production and marketing. The award is based on sincerity of purpose, character, leadership, scholastic record, and financial need. Help provided to obtain employment between junior and senior years. For an undergraduate student with financial need. Donald D. Hill Memorial Scholarship Clifford E. Samuels Memorial Scholarship For an undergraduate student with financial need. $1400 to a graduate or undergraduate student. Priority consideration given to sons and daughters of members of OSU's Alpha Theta Chapter of Phi Kappa Theta Fraternity, who graduated from OSU prior to 1975. $500 to a student in Food Science & Technology. Scholarships of approximately $500-$750 to undergraduate or graduate students based on financial need and demonstrated interest in dairy processing. Wilson H. Foote Scholarship Don Welp Memorial Scholarship $500 to a freshman based on a combination of scholarship, activities, and professional interest. General Dillingham Product Industry Scholarship M; Scholarships Grow and Show Garden Club One full tuition award as funds are made available by the Club. Limited to juniors and seniors in horticulture who show evidence of ability, promise, and need for minimum college expenses. Nominations are sent to the club for final selection. Inland Empire Golf Course Superintendent's Association Scholarship This scholarship, sponsored by superintendents in the Spokane, Washington area, is for students pursuing careers as golf course superintendents. Criteria are similar to the OGCSA scholarship outlined above. Generally, scholarships go to students at WSU but we have had successful applicants in the past. The amount of this scholarship varies annually but is generally around $400. Applications are usually received in the Horticulture Department office in February and must be submitted to the IEGCSA by March. Golf Course Superintendent's Association of America Scholarship This is a national scholarship available to students pursuing careers as golf course superintendents. Selection is based on scholastic achievement, work experience, and verified financial need. Finalists go to the International Golf Show and interview in person to determine the final award. It required a good pedigree and an outgoing personality to win this award. Our last recipient received $2,500. Application forms arrive at the Horticulture Department office in spring and are typically due at CGSAA headquarters by October 1. Ezra J. Kraus Memorial Scholarship One or more full or half-tuition scholarships to undergraduate students studying ornamental horticulture. Based on ability, promise, and reasonable need. Ezra J. Kraus Memorial Fellowship $1500 for a graduate student studying ornamental horticulture. Based on financial status, scholastic merit, and professional potential. McMinnville Women's Garden Club Scholarship One scholarship in the amount of $250 given to a junior or senior from Yamhill County majoring in Horticulture. Gary & Patricia Moss Single Parent Scholarship Scholarships totaling approximately $3500 annually to undergraduate students with a GPA of 2.50 and above. First priority to female, single parent. Submit financial aid application. Contact Financial Aid Office, Administrative Services Building A218. Multnomah Chapter DAR Scholarship A $1000 award established by the Multnomah Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution in 1988-89, to be awarded annually to anyone of sophomore standing or higher enrolled in horticulture or landscape design. National Council of State Garden Clubs, Inc. $4000 awarded to encourage study of horticulture, floriculture, landscape design, con- servation, forestry, botany, agronomy, plant pathology, environmental control, city planning, land management and allied subjects. Only one applicant per state; 20 total awarded. Nor-Am Turf Scholarship A $1,000 scholarship awarded each fall to a senior interested in becoming a golf course superintendent. Preference is given to students with good academic records, extensive work experience, and demonstrated involvement in the turf program at OSU. Apply via the Department scholarship application form no later than May 1. Recipients will be notified by the end of spring term. Northwest Turfgrass Association Scholarship A $750 scholarship awarded annually in the fall to students pursuing careers in the turf industry. Preference is given to students with strong academic records, a history of industry involvement, and potential to become industry leaders. Applications arrive at the Horticulture Department office in early spring and must be submitted to the NTA by April. Recipients are notified in late spring. OSU Horticulture Club Scholarship $750 awarded spring term. Selection based on financial need and Horticulture Club and community involvement. Must be an undergraduate in horticulture and have at least a 2.25 GPA. Oregon Federation of Garden Clubs Scholarship A full tuition grant-in-aid for an Oregon resident sophomore or upper division student majoring in ornamental and landscape horticulture. Awarded on the basis of excellence in scholarship, personal qualifications and financial need. Oregon Golf Course Superintendent's Association (OGCSA) Scholarship A $500+ scholarship awarded to students of junior standing or higher pursuing careers as golf course superintendents. Preference given to students with strong academic records and extensive golf course work experience. It also helps to be a student member of OGCSA and have worked for a member of the organization. Selection is made by a committee of OGCSA members. Applications usually arrive in the Horticulture Department office in March and must be submitted to the OGCSA by their deadline. Oregon Horticultural Society Tuition scholarships to undergraduate students in horticulture or related fields. Preference is given to horticulture majors. Recipients selected by the Oregon Horticultural Society Scholarship Committee. Oregon Nurserymen's Foundation Scholarships These scholarships are offered with the intent to encourage students to enter into and complete their academic studies in ornamental horticulture, and then to enter the nursery industry as qualified employees of fellow nursery professionals. personal interviews may be conducted prior to final selection by Oregon Nurserymen's Foundation Committee. Clackamas Chapter Award: $850 to a student beginning college studies in an ornamental horticulture field. Emerald Empire Chapter Award: $250 to a third year or higher college student majoring in horticulture, landscape architecture or landscape construction, who also graduated from an Oregon high school. Preference will be given to a student from the Emerald Empire/ Eugene area. Greenhouse Growers Award: $500 to a college student majoring in horticulture with emphasis on greenhouse/floriculture areas. Preference will be given to family members and employees of the OAN Green- 34 Scholarships Any Business Major house Chapter.Martin Holmanson Memorial Award: $500 to a college junior or senior stu- Anderson/Beta Gamma Sigma Scholarship $1000 to a senior with a minimum 3.50 dent majoring in ornamental horticulture. cumulative GPA who is a Beta Gamma Joseph B. Klypenger Award: $550 to a student Sigma member. Based on considerable promajoring in ornamental horticulture who fessional promise and general zeal for life plans to work in the ornamental industry either as an employee or as a family member and career as demonstrated through meanof a business. Mt. Hood Chapter Award: $1675 ingful involvement in extracurricular activito a college student majoring in ornamental ties, letters of recommendation, faculty references, and personal interview. horticulture. Preference will be given to applicants from nursery areas east of PortMaureen Leary Brown Memorial MBA land. Nursery Employee Award: $500 to a colFellowship lege student in ornamental horticulture who $1000 to an MBA student with first priority is employed by an OAN member firm. Nursto females. erymen's Memorial Award: $1000 to a graduHelen Mae Cropsey Memorial Scholarship ate student research project pertaining to $250 to a senior based on scholastic achieveornamental horticulture. Patio Alliance Award I: $1000 to a college student majoring ment and potential for future success in in the turf and landscape management area. business. First priority to female. Patio Alliance II: Two $500 scholarships to Marshall & Melissa Dawes Scholarship beginning college students majoring in $300 to a senior with financial need. ornamental horticulture or related fields. Roy Dexter Memorial Scholarship Retail Chapter Award I: $1000 to students $500 to a freshman with financial need and majoring in ornamental horticulture and related fields. Preference will be given to stu- a minimum GPA of 3.00 who is planning a career in business. Awarded for two years dents who are a son/daughter of an OAN provided recipient remains in good standing. member retailer, or one of their employees. Farmer's Insurance Group of Companies Retail Chapter Award II: $1000 to college stuScholarshs dents majoring in ornamental horticulture $1000 scholarship awarded annually to Coland related fields. lege of Business sophomore, junior, or senior Professional Women in Horticulture students who have established financial need Awarded each fall term. The purpose of the by filing a form with the Financial Aid scholarship is to recognize and support Office., have maintained a university grade excellence in horticulture students. point average of C+ or better, and conduct Western Washington Golf Course Superinthemselves according to the laws of the Unittendent's Association Scholarship ed States and the state of Oregon. A $500+ scholarship awarded annually in L. Jackson Memorial Scholarship the winter to one or more students pursuing Glenn Four scholarships of $1500 awarded annualcareers as golf course superintendents. Prefly to freshmen Oregon residents with a minerence is given to students with strong acadimum high school GPA of 3.50. May be emic backgrounds and extensive work awarded four consecutive years if 3.50 GPA experience on golf courses. It helps to have maintained at OSU. worked with a member of WWGCSA. SelecJoe D. Lewis Scholarship tion is made in late fall by WWGCSA committee and funds disbursed shortly after the Awarded by the Dean of the College of Business. first of the year. Application forms usually arrive in November and must be submitted Jane Goodale Mann Memorial Scholarship to the WWGCSA by their deadline. $1000 to a student with financial need planMicrobiology ning a career in business. For additional information and application form, contact the College of Science, Kidder Louise Jackman Orner Memorial Scholarship $300 to a junior or senior Oregon resident Hall 128. who is a graduate of an Oregon high school. Mark H. Middlekauf Memorial Scholarship First priority to female. Based primarily on Usually full in-state tuition for a junior or academic achievement, with financial need senior in microbiology. a secondary consideration. Joseph E. Simmons Memorial Scholarship Approximately one-half in-state tuition to a junior in microbiology. Ruth Tartar Memorial Fellowship Approximately $5000 for a graduate student to cover expenses incurred in research. COLLEGE OF BUSINESS For additional information on business scholarships and application form, contact Linda A. Johnson, Academic Advisor, College of Business, Bexell Hall 214. Harley J. and Brigitte Smith Scholarship $250 scholarship awarded annual to College of Business students for their senior year who plan to establish a career in residential investment/income property (apartments, condos or single family rental property). Bertha W. Stutz Corvallis Women's Club Scholarship $300 to a sophomore, junior, or senior, with first priority for women from Benton County. Carl Totten Memorial Scholarship $500 scholarship awarded annually to College of Business students for their senior year. Applicants must have graduated from an Oregon or Idaho high school, be a United States citizen, and have earned a cumulative university grade point average of 2.75 or higher, and have demonstrated financial need. W.A. Woodard Foundation Scholarship Two scholarships at $300 to a junior or senior based on interest in the hospitality field. Formerly called the Village Green Scholarship. Accounting Arthur Andersen and Company Scholarship $1,000 scholarship awarded annually to College of Business students with an accounting option. Selection by the accounting faculty based primarily on scholarship and professional promise. Chevron Scholarships $2,000 scholarship awarded annually to outstanding College of Business students; one entering their junior year and one entering their senior year with an accounting option. Selection by the accounting faculty based primarily on scholarship and professional promise. Coopers and Lybrand Scholarship $1,000 scholarship awarded annually to outstanding College of Business students who will be entering their senior year with an accounting option. Awarded on the basis of: 1) graduation from an Oregon high school; 2) demonstrated interest in becoming a member of the profession of certified public accountants; 3)overall cumulative grade point average of 3.2 or greater at the time of application; and 4) broad, well-rounded background in on-and off-campus extracurricular activities. Selection will be made by the accounting faculty based upon the above criteria. Deloitte and Touche Scholarship $2,000 scholarship awarded annually to outstanding College of Business students entering their senior year with an accounting option. Selection by the accounting faculty based primarily on scholarship and extracurricular activities. Deloitte and Touche Scholarship $1,000 scholarship awarded annually to outstanding College of Business students entering their junior year with an accounting option. Selection by the accounting faculty based primarily on scholarship and extracurricular activities. Selection by the accounting faculty based primarily on scholarship and extracurricular activities. Faler, Grove and Mueller Scholarship $500 scholarship awarded annually to an outstanding College of Business student with an accounting option. Selection by the accounting faculty based primarily on scholarship and professional promise. Scholarships 35 COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING For additional information on general engineering scholarships and application forms, contact the College of Engineering, Head Advisor, Covell Hall 101. Any Engineering Major Chemical Engineering $500 scholarship awarded annually to an outstanding College of Business student with an accounting option. Selection by the accounting faculty based primarily on scholarship and professional promise. Price Waterhouse Scholarship Inez J. Belknap Memorial Scholarship Based on academic performance. $500 scholarship awarded annually to outstanding College of Business students, who will be entering their senior year (or final year in the case of a post-baccalaureate) with an accounting option. Awarded on the basis of: 1) scholastic achievement-student should have an overall GPA of 3.5 in all business and accounting courses and a minimum 3.2 university cumulative GPA; 2) extracurricular activities with a clear demonstration of leadership capability; 3) professional promise in the field of public accounting. Selection will be made by the accounting faculty based upon the above criteria. $1000 for an undergraduate or graduate student with financial need. Gayle Nichols Memorial Scholarship For an undergraduate or graduate student with preference for Oregon resident. AGC Student Chapter Scholarship Stover Neyhart & Company Scholarship George Gleeson Memorial Scholarship For AGC Student Chapter members. $1000 for an undergraduate student. Harlan E. Brown Memorial Scholarship Pete Im Memorial Scholarship $500 for an undergraduate or graduate student with financial need and a minimum $250-$500 to an undergraduate student based on financial need, minimum GPA of 3.00, and creativity in problem solving. GPA of 2.57. Coral Sales/Daniels Scholarship Robert V. Mrazek Memorial Scholarship Four awards of $500 to juniors and seniors based on outstanding leadership qualities and participation in extra-curricular activities. One award to both male and female in Civil Engineering and Construction Engineering Management. KPMG Peat Marwick Scholarship $1,000 scholarship awarded annually to outstanding College of Business students entering their senior year with an accounting option. Selection by the accounting faculty based primarily on scholarship and professional promise. Management information systems Andersen Consulting Scholarship $500 scholarship awarded annually to outstanding College of Business students entering their senior year with an option of Management Information Systems (MIS). Awarded on the basis of scholastic achievement, demonstrated leadership, dedication to MIS, and good communication skills. Selection will be made by the MIS faculty. Advisory Council Scholarships $1,000 scholarships awarded annually to outstanding College of Business students entering their junior years with an option of Management Information Systems (MIS). Awarded on the basis of scholastic achievement, demonstrated leadership, dedication to MIS, and good communication skills. Selection will be made by the MIS faculty. Master In Business Administration Maureen L. Brown $1,000 scholarship awarded annually to a student admitted to the MBA Program in the College of Business at Oregon State University. Student must have achieved an undergraduate GPA of 3.25 (on a 4.0 scale). First preference will be given to a woman. Scholarships Not Administered Through the College of Business Other scholarships may become available throughout the year for which College of Business students are eligible. These will be announced on the Scholarship Bulletin Board which is located in the hallway on the second floor of Bexell Hall; or contact Linda Johnson in Bexell Hall, Room 214. Ralph A. Chapman Memorial Scholarship $500 to a sophomore, junior, or senior based on scholastic achievement, qualities of leadership, outstanding characteristics of citizenship, and financial need. Cockeram Family Tau Beta Pi Scholarship $2500 for an undergraduate or graduate student who is a member of Tau Beta Pi. Everett G. "Sid" Drew Memorial Engineering Scholarship $1500 for an undergraduate student, with preference given to high academic achievers who have overcome constraints imposed by family or personal circumstances. Norman W. Pettijohn Scholarship For additional information and application form, contact the Department of Chemical Engineering, Gleeson Hall 101. Lloyd Covert Memorial Chemical Engineering Scholarship For a junior or senior based on academic performance. Roy A. Strandberg Memorial Scholarship Based on academic performance. Charles E. Wicks Scholarship Based on financial need and academic performance. Civil Engineering/Construction Engineering Management For additional information and application form, contact Jan Strombeck, Department of Civil Engineering, Apperson Hall 111. Otto & Marie Hermann Memorial Scholarship $1500 for a freshman who is a graduate of Vernonia High School. Based on capacity to understand math and sciences, and motivation to succeed in college. $750-$1000 to a senior based on outstanding characteristics and qualities of citizenship. June & Truxton Ringe Engineering Scholarship Glenn Holcomb Memorial Scholarship $400 to a junior or senior who is a resident of Oregon or Washington. Also based on financial need. $500-$1500 to a junior or senior with minimum GPA of 3.00. Tau Beta Pi Engineering Scholarship For a senior whose interest is in construction. Minimum GPA of 3.00. Three scholarships of $500 to a sophomore, a junior, and a senior. Based on academic performance. Contact the president of Tau Beta Pi. Bloresources Engineering Bioresources Engineering scholarships are based 50 percent on scholarship and 50 percent on extra-curricular activities. Financial need is not a factor. For additional informa- tion and application form, contact the Department of Bioresources Engineering, Gilmore Hall 119. Myron G. Cropsey Agricultural Engineering Scholarship For undergraduate or graduate students. Ralph N. Lunde Memorial Scholarship For undergraduate students. Jefferson B. Rodgers Scholarship For undergraduate or graduate students. Jim McCall Memorial Scholarship Don C. Phillips Memorial Scholarship $1000-$1800 to a senior or graduate student specializing in environmental engineering. Col. Robert Gilmore Scott Memorial Scholarship 15-20 scholarships awarded annually to juniors and seniors with financial need and a minimum GPA of 3.00. Kenneth Spies Memorial Scholarship $ 750-$1000 to a senior or first-year graduate student intending a career in environmental engineering. Edward Worth Memorial Scholarship $750-$1250 for a senior with a demonstrated interest in geotechnical engineering. Electrical & Computer Engineering Electrical & Computer Engineering scholarships are based on academic performance. For additional information and application form, contact the Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, ECE 202. A Scholarships Grant S. Feikert Memorial Scholarship Mechanical Engineering Scholarships based on academic performance. For additional information and application form, contact G.M. Reistad, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Rogers Hall 204. For a junior or senior. Michael Teramura Memorial Scholarship Lawrence Fisher Memorial Scholarship $500-$800. Based on merit. Richard Earnheart Scholarship For a junior or senior. Douglas Engelbart Scholarship For a junior or senior. $1000-$1500 for a junior, senior, or graduate student studying electrical power or power generation engineering. Robert Zaworski Memorial Scholarship $600-$1000. Consideration given for participation in International Education programs. Donald Guinn Scholarship Nuclear Engineering For a junior or senior with preference for under-represented minority and female students. John Grund Memorial Engineering Scholarship Awarded to the top junior in ECE. $1600 for a junior or senior with financial need, respectable academic achievement, and evidence of a principled attitude and interest toward community understanding of all sorts of risks, including nuclear power. Contact John C. Ringle, Department of Nuclear Engineering, Radiation Center Louis Stone Electrical Engineering Scholarship C116. Ursula Bolt Knaus Memorial Scholarship Full in-state tuition for a junior or senior. Wesley Nishimura Memorial Scholarship To a student in electrical engineering. Clayton K. Dart Memorial Scholarship COLLEGE OF FORESTRY Scholarships based on academic performance. Students' prior coursework and background must indicate interest and potential for success in their chosen forestry field. For additional information and application form, contact the College of Forestry, Peavy Hall 140. $1000 to a graduate or undergraduate student. Any Forestry Major Garrard-Peters Memorial Scholarship George M. Cornwall Memorial Scholarship $1000 for an undergraduate student, with priority to seniors. Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering Scholarships based on academic performance. For additional information and application form, contact Tom West, Department of Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering, Covell Hall 118. $500 to a junior or senior. James Riggs Memorial Scholarship $1000 to an undergraduate professional program student who is an Oregon high school graduate. Autzen Scholarship $3,000 for an outstanding undergraduate majoring in forestry. Gordon A. & Priscilla E. Duncan Scholarship Five scholarships at $1000 to juniors or seniors with financial need. Green Peter Hoo Hoo Scholarship $2,700 for a student interested in pursuing a career in the forest industry. Henry Fang Scholarship $500 to an undergraduate or graduate student. Forestry Legacy Scholarship Three scholarships at $1000 to undergraduate or graduate students. Harold "Bud" Freres Memorial Scholarship In-state tuition to freshman with financial need. First priority to graduates of Salem, Oregon area high schools. James Girard, Jr. Memorial Scholarship $500 every third year awarded to a freshman. Walter A. Gruetter, Jr. Memorial Forestry Fellowship $500 to a graduate student, with first priority for female. Helping Hand Scholarship $3,500 to an undergraduate student in forestry with financial need. Dorothy D. Hoener Memorial Fellowship Five fellowships at $4000 to graduate students based on professional potential, academic achievement, need for graduates in students' area of interest, and financial need. Charles Lord Memorial Forestry Scholarship $2200 to an undergraduate student. Mary J.L. McDonald Memorial Fellowship Two fellowships at $2000 to support graduate students in forestry. Arnold & Vera Meier Memorial Education Fellowship $2500 for a top graduate student in forestry. Alfred W. Moltke Memorial Fellowship Five fellowships at $3000 to support top graduate students in forestry. Oregon Society of American Foresters Scholarship .. p $700 to a junior or senior, with preference for Oregonians showing high potential for success in the forestry profession. Albert Powers Memorial Scholarship In-state tuition to an undergraduate student, with preference to Oregon residents who show professional potential. Rollins, Burdick, Hunter Scholarship $1,000 to an outstanding forestry senior. Jack & Lila Saubert Scholarship $2000 for a graduate or undergraduate student. Schutz Family Education Fellowship Two fellowships of $1500 to support graduate education. Vance P. & Dorothy D. Shugart Forestry Scholarship Five scholarships of $1800, with two to seniors, one to junior, one to sophomore, and one to freshman. For Oregon residents Scholarships with good moral character in the upper onethird of their class. Forest Engineering Oregon Logging Conference Scholarships Four scholarships of $1,500 for Oregon residents with preference to those majoring in forest engineering. Lucille D. & Faye H. Stewart Fellowship $5000-$10000 to top graduate students doing research in forest engineering. Contact Department of Forest Engineering, Peavy Hall 211. Forest Products Plywood Pioneers Association Scholarship $1,000 to a forest products student interested in pursuing a career in the plywood industry. Portland Hoo Hoo Club Scholarship $1000 to an undergraduate student. Forest Resources Forest Resources scholarships are based primarily on academic performance. Students' prior coursework and background must indicate interest and potential for success in their chosen forestry field. For additional information, contact the College of Forestry, Peavy Hall 140 Robert Aufderheide Memorial Scholarship $2000 to support an outstanding undergraduate student in forestry who shows scholarship and financial need. Awarded every third year. Joe Crahane Memorial Scholarship Two scholarships of $1800 to freshmen, with preference to top entering students from Oregon. John R. Dilworth Memorial Fellowship $1000 to a graduate student. Floyd Hart Memorial Scholarship $2000 to a senior with financial need. Robert F. Keniston Memorial Scholarship $500 to a junior or senior. WE McCulloch Memorial Scholarship $1000 to an undergraduate student. Catherine Cox Merriam Scholarship $ 750 to an undergraduate student, with first priority to women and Native-Americans whose career interests lie in forest resource management. Kurt Jon Peterson Memorial Scholarship $800 for an undergraduate student, with preference for Oregonians. W.R. Randall Memorial Scholarship $2500 to an undergraduate student with financial need. Durward F. Slater Memorial Scholarship Two scholarships of $600 for juniors or seniors based on good character, sincerity of purpose, high scholarship, and potential for success. C. Wylie Smith III Memorial Scholarship Two scholarships of $2600 to juniors or seniors with preference to students from the Coos County area. RYA John R. Snellstrom Memorial Scholarship Walter G. Thorsell Memorial Scholarship Two scholarships of $1000 to juniors whose interest lies in forestry as a career. $500 to a junior or senior Oregon resident studying Occupational Safety & Health. Financial need considered only if otherwise equally qualified candidates. T.J. & Margaret 0. Starker Memorial Scholarship $750 to an undergraduate student based on personal integrity, scholarship, financial need, and commitment to forestry as a chosen career. David Wolfson Memorial Scholarship COLLEGE OF HOME ECONOMICS & EDUCATION For additional information on Education fellowships and application form, contact Lance Haddon, Assistant Director of Student $250 to an undergraduate student with financial need. Forest Science Services, Education, Education Hall 109. Adult Education Catherine Bacon Memorial Graduate Fellowship Approximately $500 to a student pursuing a master's degree in Adult Education with a concentration in English as a second lan- $500 to a graduate student with first preference for female. Contact Department of Forest Science, Forestry Sciences Lab 026. Scott Henderson Memorial Fellowship guage. Master of Arts In Teaching COLLEGE OF HEALTH & HUMAN Elwood Keema Memorial Fellowship PERFORMANCE For a graduate student in teacher education For more information and application form, with financial need and a minimum GPA of contact Kathleen Heath, Assistant Dean and 3.00. Head Advisor, Women's Building 120. Any Health & Human Performance Major Walter Adrion Memorial Education Scholarship $500 to a junior with demonstrated excellence in wellness, having exemplary wellness habits, and involvement in student activities. Minimum GPA of 3.00 Dean's Health & Human Performance Scholarship $250-$500 to sophomores and above on the College's Dean's List who show outstanding leadership and service. Herman & Lois Miller Memorial Scholarship Scholarships totaling $500-$2000 to graduate or undergraduate students preparing to teach. Preference given to older students returning to school. Minimum GPA of 2.50. Submit financial aid application. Contact Financial Aid Office, Administration Services Building A218. Exercise & Sport Medicine Clair Langton Memorial Scholarship $1000 to a junior with minimum 3.25 GPA who has demonstrated leadership and potential for future achievements. Eva Seen Memorial Scholarship Full in-state tuition to a senior with minimum GPA of 3.25. First priority to women preparing to teach physical education. Also based on contributions to campus and community life, demonstrated leadership quality, harmonious development of mind and body, good character, and potential for future achievement. Public Health For additional information, contact Professor Anne Rossignol, Chair, Department of Public Health, Waldo Hall 258. Carl Anderson Memorial Scholarship $500 to a junior or senior who demonstrates proficiency in both written and verbal communication, and has demonstrated leadership and professional commitment through campus and community services. Minimum GPA of 3.25. Denabelle Linville Memorial Fellowship $500-$1000 to graduate students, with first priority to female Oregon resident pursuing a teaching career. Gene Lytle Memorial Education Fellowhip $250 to a graduate student with financial need who is pursuing a Master of Arts in Teaching degree. Herman & Lois Miller Memorial Fellowship Three to five awards of $200-$2000 to students preparing to teach. Preference given to older students returning to school. Submit financial aid application. Arizona Sawyers Memorial Fellowship $500-$1000 to a graduate student, with first priority to female Oregon resident pursuing a teaching career. Chaplin and Rieke Memorial Fellowship For a graduate student in teacher education with financial need and a minimum GPA of 3.50 in the last two quarters of undergraduate study. Mary Jane Wall Education Fellowship Two $1,500 scholarships for graduate students pursuing a degree in counseling. Secondary Education Lucille Borigo Memorial Scholarship For a senior or graduate student who is an Oregon resident, a member of Phi Beta Lambda, and intends to pursue a master of arts in teaching business. Contact the local chapter of Phi Beta Lambda or the State Department of Education. Technical Education Clayton K. Dart F Memorial Fellowship $500-$1000 for a graduate student with financial need and a minimum GPA of 3.00. Home Economics For additional information on Home Economics scholarships and fellowships, contact Dr. Sandra A. Helmick, Associate Dean, College of Home Economics & Education, Milam Hall 114. KM Scholarships Any Home Economics Major Phyllis H. Ballou Scholarship Approximately $500 to an undergraduate student in home economics with financial need. Ruth Beckwith Scholarship Approximately two $800 awards to students in home economics with preference to students majoring in Housing Studies. Leone Elliott Covert Scholarship Approximately $500 awarded on the basis of scholarship and potential leadership to a freshman in home economics. Laurinda Kemper Dickinson Scholarship Approximately $100 to a home economics student in Human Development and Family Sciences with demonstrated academic promise. Gladys Whipple Goode Scholarship Approximately two $500 awards to undergraduate students in home economics with demonstrated interest and talent in apparel, interiors, and merchandising. Virginia Houtchens Memorial Scholarship For a junior or senior who graduated from a Lane County high school. Based on interest in and aptitude for home economics, financial need, and scholarship. Jackson County Extension Scholarship Two scholarships of $1000 to undergraduate students, with first priority for females from Jackson County seeking a career in home economics. Jackson County Home Extension Scholarship One scholarship of approximately $1,500 to a Jackson County female in home economics with financial need and high scholarship; preference to sophomores, juniors, and seniors (freshmen may be considered). Grace A. Johnson Memorial Scholarship Two scholarships of approximately $300 to sophomores or juniors with financial need. Degree of self-sufficiency is considered. Josephine County Home Extension Scholarship Approximately $500 to a Josephine County student in home economics. Awarded on the basis of high scholarship, aptitude in field and financial aid. Kappa Omicron Nu Scholarship aptitude and interest in a career in Home Economics Extension in Oregon. Karen L. Kraft Memorial Scholarship Approximately $1,000 to a senior in Nutrition and Food Management with an option related to dietetics, nutrition, or management with evidence of commitment to community service, contributing to own education, and participating in professional activities. Lathrop Scholarship (Oregon Association for Family and Community Education) Approximately $150 to a junior or senior in home economics with good scholarship, financial need, and an expressed interest in an Extension career in Oregon. Approximately $350 to a junior, senior, or graduate student in child development or family relations with scholastic competence and evidence of intent to continue in the field. Esther Taskerud Scholarship Approximately three $450 awards to undergraduate students in home economics with commitment to the field; preference is given to students with a 4-H background. Trindle Scholarship (Oregon Association for Family and Community Education) Approximately $350 to an undergraduate student with aptitude and interest in a Home Economics Extension career in Oregon. Ann McDonald Lindsay Scholarship Approximately $1,000 to an undergraduate in nutrition or allied fields with superior academic achievement and commitment to the nutrition profession. Helen McDowall Memorial Scholarship Approximately three scholarships of $750 to sophomores, juniors, or seniors in home economics from Clackamas County with demonstrated aptitude and interest in home economics. Dorothy Sherrill Miller Scholarship Approximately two $250 awards to students in home economics with financial need and high scholarship. Rita Norris Memorial Scholarship Approximately ten scholarships of $1000 to undergraduate students who are Oregon residents with an expressed interest in teaching. Ben and Ethel Pubols Scholarship Approximately $150 to a student in home economics with academic achievement and financial need. Oregon Extension Homemakers Council Trindle Scholarship For a junior with aptitude and interest in a career in Home Economics Extension in Oregon. Kennison Scholarship June E. and Truxton Ringe Scholarship Approximately $150 to a junior or senior with financial need in upper third class with Buena Maris Mockmore Steinmetz Scholarship Approximately $700 to a junior or senior in home economics who is an Oregon high school graduate with financial need. Minnie Price Memorial Scholarship Kermis Scholarship (Oregon Association for Family and Community Education) Approximately two $400 awards to juniors or seniors based on high scholarship, financial need, and aptitude. Martha Dreyer MacGregor Scholarship Approximately $250 to a student member of Kappa Omicron Nu (a home economics honor society) with demonstrated leadership skills and commitment to home economics. Additional Kappa Omicron Nu application is required. Award is based on scholarship and financial need. Approximately $1,000 to benefit a student in home economics of an underrepresented minority group; preference is given to a Native American. Audrey Wiencken Smith Scholarship Approximately five scholarships of $1200 to freshmen who are rural Oregon residents. Margaret Seibold Memorial Scholarship Approximately $250 awarded every third year. Approximately $500 to a junior or senior in home economics who is a resident of either Oregon or Washington with demonstrated scholastic achievement. Azalea and Charles Sager Scholarship Approximately $450 to a junior or senior in home economics; preference is given to a resident of Azalea House. Woods/Foster Fellowship Approximately $1100 to a graduate student. Apparel, Interiors, Housing, and Merchandising Ruth Beckwith Memorial Scholarship Approximately two scholarships of $800 to undergraduate students, with preference to students specializing in Home Management/Housing. Gladys Goode Memorial Scholarship Two scholarships of $500 to sophomores or juniors who have demonstrated interest and talent in apparel, interiors, and merchandising. Preference for Oregon residents talented in the field of clothing, textiles, and related arts. Granite-Meyer Housing Award $1000 to a graduate student to provide financial assistance with research for studying housing. Award based on relevance and originality of the proposed research, financial need, and scholastic standing. Dorothy Schilling Memorial Scholarship Approximately $500 to a junior, senior, or graduate student who has completed at least three credits in courses related to design of fashion apparel, functional clothing, or theatrical costuming. Must have strong demonstrated interest in aesthetic aspects of clothing. Application process includes two letters of recommendation and portfolio of student work. Special application form in Milam 116. Human Development & Family Sciences May Dubois Memorial Thesis or Dissertation Grant $500-$875 to a graduate student with minimum GPA of 3.50 pursuing a master's degree in home economics education. Must have completed two-thirds of the required hours in the program, including the course on research methods. Laurinda Kemper Dickinson Memorial Home Economics Scholarship $500 scholarship based on extraordinary academic promise. Scholarships 39 Buena Maris Mockmore Steinmetz Memorial Scholarship Curtis and Isabella Holt Memorial Work Scholarship Auxiliary to the Oregon Veterinary Medical Association Scholarship $400 to a junior, senior, or graduate student with scholastic competence, financial need, and evidence of intent to continue in the field of child development or family relationships. Nutrition & Food Management A number of work scholarships at approximately $300 to provide financial assistance to deserving graduate students. $200 to a fourth-year student who has advanced the prestige of the College of Veterinary Medicine on the university campus. Dorman Hyde Scholarship $500 Auxiliary to the American Veterinary Medical Association Scholarship Annie Lindsay Memorial Scholarship $1000 to an undergraduate student and $2500 to a graduate student studying Dietetics or Nutrition Science. Must have at least one year of studies left. Criteria includes evidence of academic achievement through grades in science. Dorman Hyde Memorial Scholarship $1000 to a senior I who is active in extracurricular activities and demonstrates leadership in professional activities. Lane County Pharmaceutical Association Scholarship Need, residence of Lane County, $3,000. Jewell Fields Rohl fing Fellowship Marion-Polk-Yamhill Pharmaceutical Association Approximately $500 to a graduate student. For a junior from MPY counties; academics and need: $250. Ruth Tartar Memorial Fellowship Approximately $5000 to a graduate student to cover expenses incurred in research. COLLEGE OF OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES For additional information and application form, contact Lawrence F. Small, Associate Dean, College of Oceanography, Oceanography Administration Office. Curtis and Isabella Holt Memorial Education Fund in Marine Science For students studying Oceanography. Richard Mathews Memorial Scholarship For a deserving graduate student nearing completion of thesis. Marine Resource Management Geoffrey Dimmick Memorial Fellowship Two scholarships to marine resource management graduate students with financial need. Recipients will be responsible for maintaining the MRM student library and serving as Dimmick Center manager. Contact J.J. Gonor, Head Graduate Student Advisor, College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences, Oceanography Administration Office. COLLEGE OF PHARMACY For additional information on Pharmacy scholarships and application form, contact Richard A. Ohvall, Dean, College of Pharmacy, Pharmacy Building, Room 205A. B. W. Co. Scholarships Professional activities and scholastic achievement. Four $500 scholarships. Frank and Esther Golden Memorial Scholarship Three scholarships of $1000 for senior I "worthy" students. Frank and Esther Golden Scholarship Eight scholarships of $400 each for outstanding achievement in both scholastic performance and professional activities. Curtis and Isabella Holt Memorial Pharmacy Scholarship Four scholarships of $500 for first-year students. Two scholarships are for OSU students, two are for off-campus students. Fred Meek Memorial Scholarship $300 to a senior I student. Selected on the basis of scholastic ability and financial need. Linn/Benton Pharmaceutical Association Scholarship Must be a resident of Linn or Benton County. $200 to a fourth-year student who has advanced the prestige of the College of Veterinary Medicine on the university campus. Don and Betty Bailey Scholarship $500 to a fourth-year student interested in small ruminants. Cascade Obedience Club Scholarship As funds permit, $1,000 awards are given to Oregon resident students from Washgton, Clackamas, or Multnomah counties who have an interest in small animals or small animal practice. Roby D. Eaton Memorial Scholarship $100 given to a third-year student interested in equine medicine and surgery. Hill's Pet Products, Inc. Scholarship Academic achievement and professional activities: $500 $4,000; divided so as to give one student each year $1,000. Based on financial need; the fourth-year student's to be based on financial need and an interest in clinical NACDS Education Foundation nutrition. Mayfleld Scholarship Only second or third year student with a demonstrated interest in Community Pharmacy. OSPA Scholarship (Oregon State Pharmaceutical Association) Selected by the OSPA Committee. Two $375 scholarships. O'Deane Faris Scholarship Need, professional activity in junior year, and scholarship: $500 Chintimini Kennel Club Scholarship Two scholarships of $1000 to third-year students based on financial need and interest in canine medicine and surgery. For Oregon residents. Frank & Amy Finch Memorial Scholarship $500 to a fourth-year student exhibiting proficiency in equine medicine or surgery. Jack Hardesty Memorial Scholarship Selected by OSHP Four scholarships of $250 to first-year or third-year students with first priority to individuals with children. Professional Society of Pharmacists Scholarships Bruce Hultgren Memorial Scholarship Oregon Society of Hospital Pharmacists Scholarship Selected by PSOP: $2,500 Southern Oregon Pharmaceutical Two $500 scholarships selected by sponsor; preference given to Josephine or Jackson County. COLLEGE OF VETERINARY MEDICINE The scholarships listed below are for veterinary medicine students only. For additional information on scholarships in the College of Veterinary Medicine and application form, contact Dr. Norman E. Hutton, Associate Dean, College of Veterinary Medicine, Magruder Hall 200D. American Animal Hospital Association Scholarship $250 to a fourth-year student in recognition of outstanding clinical proficiency in small animal medicine and surgery. $100 to a first-year student who exhibits an interest in and an aptitude for veterinary pathology. Dallen Jones Memorial Scholarship $200 to a first-year student, with preference for persons from the Douglas County area. Selection based on character, attitude, maturity, and professional conduct. L.M. Koger Memorial Scholarship $150 to a first-year student based on character, attitude, maturity, and professional conduct. Creston & Dorothea Lamont Memorial Veterinary Medicine Scholarship $500 for a student interested in poultry as a career. Scholarship may be awarded to the same student throughout the four-year program. Priority to first-year students. Dick Magruder Memorial Scholarship $500. Awards committee to make recommendation. 40 Scholarships North Shore Animal League Scholarships ALL-CAMPUS SCHOLARSHIPS Harry & David Holmes Scholarship $25,000; twenty-five $1,000 scholarships given to students based on financial need and good academic standing. All-campus scholarships are based on a combination of financial need and academic performance. All major fields of study are considered. Eligibility is restricted to undergraduates who have completed fewer than 12 terms. To qualify, students must have a financial aid application processed and on file in the Financial Aid Office by March 1st. For more information, contact the Financial Aid Office, Administrative Services Building One or two awards of $500-$1000 for graduates of a Jackson County high school. Additional application from high school required. Pfizer, Inc. Scholarship $1,000 to assist a fourth-year student. Purina Mills, Inc., Scholarship $200 to a fourth-year student who exhibits the greatest effort, interest, aptitude and proficiency in swine medicine. Oregon Veterinary Medical Association Scholarship $275 to first-year students based on character; attitude; moral and professional conduct; and contribution, interest, and dedication to the welfare of his/her classmates. For Oregon residents. Rogue Valley Kennel Club Scholarship $500 scholarship based on financial need and a sincere interest in small animal practice. Rogue Valley Veterinary Medicine Medical Association Scholarships $400. Funds to provide assistance to a firstyear and a third-year student with moving costs to and from OSU to WSU. J.E. Salsbury Memorial Veterinary Medicine Scholarship One scholarship at $2000, others at $1500 or $1000. For third-year students demonstrating superior scholarship, initiative, perseverance, potential for leadership, and financial need. 4-H For more information on 4-H scholarships, contact Duane P. Johnson, County Extension Office, Ballard Extension 105. Babe Coe Memorial Scholarship Approximately $1500 for a freshman 4-H member enrolled during the current year in a 4-H project or activity. Must have completed a minimum of three years of 4-H including the current year. For Oregon residents. Also based on high school academic performance. Harney County 4-H Memorial Scholarship For 4-H members from Harney County, Oregon. Contact Harney County Extension Service, Bums, Oregon, (503)573-2506. O.M. Plummer Memorial Agricultural Honors Scholarship For entering students, with preference for students studying animal science. Must be a 4-H member with a record of leadership, and participate in the Pacific International Junior Livestock Exposition as an exhibitor or on a 4-H judging team. Also based on academic performance. Robert W. Wilcox Memorial Scholarship $250 to graduate students with financial need. Specifically for Extension agents who wish to obtain an advanced degree and return to the Extension program to do 4-H club work. Contact Oregon 4-H Foundation, (503)754-2602. A218. Clarence W. Agsten Memorial Scholarship Two awards of $500-$1000. Frank and Mabel Albright Memorial Scholarship Tuition and books. For freshmen who are graduates of a Benton County high school. Citizenship and community activity will be considered. Upper one-third of high school class. Renewable for four years if 2.50 GPA maintained at OSU. Naomi Catherine Andrews Memorial Scholarship One or two awards of $600 for residents or non-residents. Jack Bennett Memorial Scholarship $300 to an entering freshman who is a graduate of a Josephine County high school. Preference given to students from Grants Pass. Marie Harbeck Berger Scholarship Duane E. Marshall Memorial Scholarship $500 to freshmen, with priority for graduates of Newberg High School. Separate application from high school required. Irene McKinley Memorial Scholarship Amount varies. Grayce E. Oliver Memorial Scholarship A number of awards at approximately $1600 for entering freshmen who are Milwaukie High School graduates. GPA of 3.00 or above in high school. Recipient must possess acceptable character and citizenship, with strong potential and direction towards professional goals. Separate application from high school required. Renewable for four years. George & Shirley Ray Scholarship $500-$1000 to sophomore or junior transfer students from Central Oregon Community College. Priority for those who have attended COCC for two years. Preference for Oregon residents. Separate application from COCC required. Elizabeth Ritchie Memorial Scholarship $500-$1000 for Oregon high school graduates of outstanding ability, including but not limited to athletic ability. $300-$600 for residents or non-residents with demonstrated leadership and service qualities. Entering freshmen must have a minimum GPA of 3.50, returning students a minimum GPA of 3.00. Robert W Shaw Memorial Scholarship Charles H. Bowen Memorial Student Aid Scholarship $200-$600. Approximately $1600 for students from Malheur County, Harney County, or other Eastern Oregon County. Also considered are students form Payette County, Idaho. In order of preference, scholarship based on integrity, character, citizenship, financial need, and athletic potential. James Harrison Collins Memorial Scholarship $500-$1000 for graduates of a Columbia County high school. Must be an Oregon resident with a record of service to school and community and be in top 15 percent of high school graduating class. Inez Darling Davis Memorial Scholarship $500-$1000 for native-born citizens of the U.S. with excellent academic record. May be renewed for one year. Derald D. Swift Memorial Scholarship Forrest Tower Memorial Scholarship $200-$600. $200-$700 for sophomore. Mary VanKirk Memorial Scholarship $100-$300. U.G. Dubach Memorial Scholarship Rueben G. & Myron M. Winslow Memorial Two-four awards at $1000-$2000. For residents or non-residents. Scholarship Eldon Frink Memorial Scholarship $1000. $500-$1200 for juniors or seniors, with preference given to students from the southwestern rural area of Polk County. Awarded to students in Agricultural Sciences, Forestry, and Home Economics & Education on a rotating basis. ATHLETICS For more information on Beaver Club scholarships for intercollegiate athletes, contact Michael L. Beachley, Compliance Officer, Intercollegiate Athletics, Gill 221. Any Sport William F. Herrin Memorial Scholarship $1000-$2000 for juniors or seniors who are Oregon residents with all schooling done at OSU. Renewable for one year. Minimum GPA of 3.00. Three or more awards of approximately Athletic Emergency Scholarship For fifth-year and beyond. For student athletes with athletic eligibility and/or scholarship support has expired. Scholarships Lucille Cogswell Foster Scholarship Lon Stiner Rosebowl Scholarship Preference for women athletes who have completed eligibility in athletic competition to continue their studies for degree completion at OSU. Academic performance considered. II Merle & Toni Taylor Family Scholarship First priority for Christian student athletes at OSU. For Oregon residents who are expected to participate in intercollegiate athletics. Priority consideration given to the football and men's basketball programs. Minimum GPA of 2.80. Gymnastics Percy Locey Memorial Scholarship Based on high achievement. Reynolds Family Scholarship Approximately $1300 based on high achievement. Jim & Dorotha Barrett Scholarship Summer Work Program Two scholarships of approximately $2350 with first priority to women in sports. Approximately $900 for a junior, senior, or graduate student. For residents or non-residents of good character and knowledge in athletics. Financial need will not outweigh other criteria. Academic performance considered. Madaline Swarbrick Memorial Scholarship Herb & Anita Summers Gymnastics Scholarship Summer work scholarship in the Department of Athletics for intercollegiate athletes. Herb & Anita Summers Athletic Scholarship Based on academic performance. Ralph Miller Scholarship Scholarship awarded on the basis of gymnastics ability, as well as academic interest, achievement, and leadership quality. Non-contact Sports Gary & Shirley Moller Basketball Scholarship Ralph Colwell Non-Contact Sports Scholarship One or more scholarships totaling approximately $4000. Approximately $175 to benefit men's and women's golf, men's and women's track, volleyball, wrestling, softball, women's swimming, and crew. Academic performance considered. Patrick Wayne Valley Memorial Scholarship Don Burkland Basketball Scholarship For fifth-year senior. To provide annual grants to one or more lettermen in any major intercollegiate sport who are still working towards attainment of degree and has completed athletic eligibility. Approximately $2000. Baseball Dee Andros Baseball Scholarship Approximately $600. Coaches nominate candidate. Bert Babb, Sr. Memorial Scholarship Approximately $2600, with first priority to students playing baseball. Morrell J. Crary Memorial Scholarship Approximately $600, with first priority for students from the Salem, Oregon area who are proficient in baseball. Merle & Toni Taylor Family Scholarship First priority for Christian student athletes at OSU. For Oregon residents who are expected to participate in intercollegiate athletics. Priority consideration given to the football and men's basketball programs. Minimum GPA of 2.80. Paul Valenti Scholarship William & Grace West Basketball Scholarship Mike Keck Memorial Scholarship Approximately $400. Based on academic performance. Crew Approximately $975. Dee Andros Crew Scholarship Spec Keene Memorial Scholarship Coaches nominate candidates. Mel Mason Memorial Scholarship Approximately $350 for a student involved in golf or volleyball. Academic performance considered. Track & Field Mertroe Hollinger Memorial Scholarship Approximately $285. Recipients selected on the basis of scholastic ability, sportsmanship, and citizenship. Wrestling McHenry Memorial Wrestling Scholarship Approximately $500. Preference for outstanding oarswoman. Based on wrestling ability, academic interest, achievement, and leadership qualities. First priority for residents of Benton County. Second choice for other Oregon residents. E.A. Stevens Memorial Crew Scholarship Dale Thomas Wrestling Scholarship Approximately $500 for an outstanding student athlete making exceptional academic progress. For current member of outstanding character on OSU's baseball team. Margaret Drlica Memorial Crew Scholarship Kermit Roth Memorial Golden Beaver Scholarship Scholarship for a senior, with preference for outstanding oarsman. Approximately $1000 for students who have demonstrated athletic proficiency, indicating ability to participate successfully in OSU's intercollegiate athletic competition. William & Grace West Crew Scholarship Wrestling Program Scholarship Football Based on wrestling ability, academic interest, achievement, and leadership qualities. Fraternities & Sororities Wes Schulmerich Memorial Scholarship $1500-$1700 for Oregon residents with a minimum GPA of 2.80. Scholarship alternates between football and baseball. Tim Wirth Memorial Scholarship $1000 for a freshman with integrity, high personal standards, and commitment to work toward improving and contributing as a team player. Based on baseball ability, academic interest, achievement, and leadership qualities. First preference for a Benton County high school graduate. Basketball Earl Baird Memorial Athletic Scholarship Approximately $8000. C.J. Bartlett Memorial Scholarship One or more scholarships totaling approximately $1500 for freshmen. Academic performance considered. Dave Schilling Memorial Scholarship First priority for players from Hillsboro High School. Academic performance considered. Wes Schulmerich Memorial Scholarship $1500-$1700 for Oregon residents with a GPA of 2.80 and above. Scholarship alternates between football and baseball. Phil Small Memorial Scholarship Approximately $1200. Priority for Oregon residents. Academic achievement considered. First priority for football, then all other sports. Financial need will not outweigh other criteria. Based on wrestling ability, academic interest, achievement, and leadership qualities. Alpha Lambda Scholarship Numerous scholarships totaling approximately $1000. For active members in good standing with the Alpha Lambda Chapter of Lambda Chi Fraternity. Selections made based on equal weighting of financial need, scholastic performance, service to the fraternity, and service to OSU. Contact Bill Deeks, Alpha Lambda Association, P.O. Box 1419, Beaverton, OR. 97075. Dorothy & Dave Blasen Scholarship $300 for a member of Kappa Sigma Fraternity who is active in Army ROTC. Contact Kappa Sigma Fraternity, OSU Chapter. N Scholarships and future promise. Contact Marliene Costa, Graduate School, Administrative Services Building, Room A300. Mary Barbare Memorial Scholarship For undergraduate students. Must submit financial aid application. Contact Financial Aid Office, Administrative Services Building A218. DeLoach Work Scholarship o $350-$400 for undergraduate students. Application is to be initiated by faculty members. The work assignment must relate to the area of the students' academic training and must provide a significant learning experience. Contact Office of Academic Affairs, Administrative Services Building 0 7 . 171, . 'lI'- b 4f A624. Herbert F. Frolander Graduate Teaching Award lb Ai 1 rr $300 awarded to an outstanding graduate teaching assistant. Contact Marliene Costa, Graduate School, Administrative Services Building A300. Benjamin L. Hooks Scholarship Vane & Fern Gibson Memorial Chi Omega Scholarship Approximately $100 to a Chi Omega member of junior standing living in Eta Alpha Chapter House. Must have contributed to the betterment of Chi Omega Sorority and OSU. Contact Nancy Kniesel, Chi Omega Chapter Advisor. Vane & Fern Gibson Memorial Phi Delta Theta Scholarship Approximately $100 for a Phi Delta Theta Fraternity member of junior standing who has contributed to the betterment of the Fraternity. Based on qualities of character, scholarship, leadership, and service. Must live in Chapter House in junior year. Contact Erin Haynes, Phi Delta Theta Chapter Advisor, OSU Fund, Snell Hall 517. Hilda Jones Kappa Delta Scholarship $500 for a member of Alpha Kappa Chapter of Kappa Delta Sorority. Based on service to Kappa Delta through leadership, fostering and promoting sisterhood, service to campus and community, scholastic achievement, and financial need. Contact Kappa Delta Scholarship Chairperson. Lambda Chi Alpha Trust Scholarship $300-$450 for an active member in good standing with the Alpha Lambda Chapter of Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity. Selection based on equal weighting of financial need, scholastic performance, service to the Fraternity, and service to OSU. Contact Bill Deeks, Alpha Lambda Association, P.O. Box 1419, Beaverton, OR. 97075. Thomas W. Morrish Memorial Scholarship Approximately $500 for members of Kappa Sigma Fraternity who display outstanding commitment and participation with emphasis on athletics and scholastic achievement. For juniors or seniors with a GPA of 3.00 or above. Contact Kappa Sigma Fraternity, OSU Chapter. Gayle Schumacher Memorial Scholarship First priority to "Greek" women of junior standing at OSU who show above average scholarship and leadership. Contact Judy Brazee, Office Manager, Dean of Students, Administrative Services Building A200. Clayton Strain Memorial Scholarship Numerous awards totaling approximately $15000 per year. For active members in good standing with the Alpha Lambda Chapter of Lambda Chi Alpha. Selection based on equal weighting of financial need, scholastic performance, service to the Fraternity, and service to OSU. Contact Bill Deeks, Alpha Lambda Association, P.O. Box 1419, Beaverton, OR. 97075. Terry Yaguchi Memorial Scholarship To a currently enrolled active member of Delta Lambda Chapter of Delta Tau Delta Fraternity. Academic performance and financial need considered. Contact Delta Tau Delta Fraternity, Oregon State University. Don Welp Memorial Scholarship $1400 with priority consideration given to sons and daughters of members of OSU's Alpha Theta Chapter of Phi Kappa Theta Fraternity, who graduated from OSU prior to 1975. For undergraduate or graduate students enrolled in the College of Agricultural Sciences or the College of Science majoring in Food Science & Technology or Plant Pathology. Contact Dan Farkas, Key Advisor, Food Science & Technology, Wiegand Hall 108. GENERAL SCHOLARSHIPS All majors are considered for general scholarships. Hallie Bayley Memorial Fellowship One or more scholarships totaling approximately $2000 for graduate students based on past and current academic performance For non-traditional, older-than-average students, preferably with children. Sophomore and above. Preference to students who have previously been clients of the Department of Social Services in Oregon. Strong preference for those who have previously been enrolled in the education and vocational training program in the Oregon State Department of Corrections. Contact president of the Corvallis/Albany Chapter of the NAACP. Marilyn Koski Memorial Scholarship $5000 over four years awarded to a Crescent Valley High School graduate who has shown improvement in curricular or extra-curricular activities. Must have good citizenship. Priority given to applicant who is the first one in their family to attend college. Contact Crescent Valley High School Career Center. Richard A. Nixon Memorial Scholarship $750 for Pendleton Senior High School scholar athlete graduates. Based on financial need and academic achievement. Contact Pendleton Senior High School. Phi Kappa Phi Scholarship Two scholarships of $1000 to active members of junior standing in The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi. Based on academic achievement and potential. Contact OSU Chapter of The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi. Oregon Laurels Scholarships for Oregon Residents This scholarship recognizes Oregon high school seniors with instructional tuition waivers. To qualify, a student must graduate from an Oregon high school, have a minimum GPA of 3.75 and a minimum SAT of 1000. A common application is used in conjunction with the Presidential Scholarship program. Contact New Student Programs at (503) 737-2626 for more information. Scholarships Oregon Laurels Scholarship for Non Residents Grace Wu Memorial Scholarship Up to 12 exceptional non-resident high school seniors are selected each year on the basis of high school grade-point average, community and/or school involvement and response to essay questions. The award, which is for the amount of tuition differential between resident and non-resident, is renewable for up to three years of undergraduate study at Oregon State University. The application packet is sent beginning February 1 to all non-resident U.S. citizens. $250 for a sophomore, junior, or senior. The recipient must show totally unbiased leadership. Staff and faculty members submit names of possible candidates. Contact Erin Haynes, Director, OSU Fund, Snell Hall 517. Rosemary Poole Rouse Memorial Scholarship For entering freshmen graduates of Baker High School. Financial need considered. GPA of 3.00 or above. Contact Baker High School Guidance and Counseling Office. Janet Schultz Memorial Scholarship Approximately $175 to a student working on the Beaver Yearbook. Contact Frank Ragulsky, Manager, Student Media, Memorial Union East 118. Lucille D. Stewart Scholarship Contact John Evey, OSU Development Office, Snell Hall 517. Tuthill Work Scholarship Pays wages for workers in the Soils Department Lab and the Engineering Labs. Contact Department of Crop & Soil Science or College of Engineering. Under-represented Minority Achievement Scholarships for Entering Freshmen OSU offers at least 32 scholarships covering mandatory tuition and fees for up to five years in this program. Applicants must be U.S. citizens, residents of Oregon, and graduates of Oregon high schools (or holders of a GED) who meet regular admission consideration requirements. The awards are available to the following groups: African American, Hispanic American, or Native American. The application deadline is March 1, 1993. Contact George Gaines at P.F. Yerex Memorial Graduate Fellowship $1500 awarded to an outstanding graduate student in a science or technology field. Contact Marliene Costa, Graduate School, Administrative Services Building A300. HATFIELD MARINE SCIENCE CENTER For more information, contact Pam Rogers, HMSC, 2030 Marine Science Drive, Newport, OR. 97356-5296. Joan Crebbin Memorial Fellowship For graduate students, with preference for deserving students who are involved in Marine Science public education program as interns, and to students whose major study emphasis is Marine Biology, particularly mammals. Curtis & Isabella Holt Memorial Education Fund in Marine Science Walter Jones Memorial Fellowship $300 to a graduate student, to encourage graduate work in subjects which contribute to fisheries development. Candidate must have completed 12 or more hours of graduate work, and have demonstrated ability to conduct research which would contribute to fisheries development. Lylian B. Reynolds Memorial Scholarship Approximately $1000 for Oregon resident engaged in the study of Marine Science at the OSU Marine Science Center. International, American-Indian, & Minority Financial need a factor on all International, American-Indian, & Minority scholarships. Unless otherwise specified, any major considered. (503) 737-4411. Sherman & Carrie Cook Scholarship Under-represented Minority Achievement Scholarships for Undergraduate Students with Junior Standing and Above For foreign students likely to return to their country to work for the betterment and progress in their country. Contact Office of International Education, Snell Hall 444. OSU offers at least 42 scholarships covering tuition for up to three years in the program. Applicants must be U.S. citizens, residents of Oregon, have 90 or more hours of college work completed, be currently enrolled at Oregon State or meet transfer admission consideration requirements. The awards are available to the following groups: African American, Hispanic American, and Native American. The application deadline for 1993 is May 1. Contact George Gaines at (503) 737-4411. Tim Wirth Memorial Scholarship For Crescent Valley High School graduates who show good citizenship in school and community and are involved in high school athletics. Minimum high school GPA of 3.25. Contact Crescent Valley High School Career Center. Cropsey Native-American Emergency Scholarship Awarded to students of Native-American descent. Contact Cassandra ManuelitoKerkvliet, Indian Education Coordinator, Office of Multicultural Affairs, Snell Hall 43 Wyoming, or Montana. Submit financial aid application. Contact Financial Aid Office, Administrative Services Building A218. Harry E. Goheen Memorial Book Scholarship Approximately $300 to a junior or senior majoring in math or computer sciences. First priority to under-represented minority student. Contact Financial Aid Office, Administrative Services Building A218. Lonnie B. Harris Memorial Scholarship For minority students with financial need in the Educational Opportunities Program. Contact Educational Opportunities Program, Waldo Hall 337. Lucy Hsu Ho Scholarship $500 for undergraduate or graduate foreign student of ethnic Chinese descent. Based on leadership in student and/or community activities and organizations, and desire to serve others in candidate's future chosen field of work. Contact Office of International Education, Snell Hall 444. Toivo Niemi Memorial Finnish Student Scholarship $5000-$6000 for undergraduate or graduate students from Finland, with first preference for a discipline in Natural Resources. Contact the Office of International Education, Snell Hall 444. Thomas C. Hogg Memorial Scholarship $600 for a first-year graduate foreign student in Anthropology. Contact Department of Anthropology, Waldo Hall 238. David W. Schacht Native-American Student Scholarship $200 per term, including summer, for undergraduate students of American-Indian descent with tribal affiliation. Must have demonstrated ability and scholarship during high school or college. Submit financial aid application. Contact Financial Aid Office, Administrative Services Building A218. Simerville International Education Scholarship Approximately $100 for undergraduate or graduate U.S. or foreign students. Recipient must have voluntarily contributed extensively to International understanding, either through personal relationships, research and scholarship, or involvement in campus or community organizations. Contact Office of International Education, Snell Hall 444. Helen J. Smith American-Indian Scholarship Approximately $4000 for students from Thailand, Taiwan, and the Republic of China. Contact the Office of International Education, Snell Hall 444. Two or three scholarships of $500-$1000 to undergraduates with preference for students from Indian high schools. Must be American-Indian. Submit financial aid application. Contact Cassandra Manuelito-Kerkvliet, Indian Education Coordinator, Office of Multicultural Affairs, Snell Hall 328. William Harrison Gill Memorial Education Gertrude Strickland Memorial Fellowship 328. Joel R. Friend Foreign Student Scholarship Scholarship One or two awards of $400-$600 for students of American-Indian descent from Oregon, Washington, Idaho, California, Utah, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, Colorado, For foreign graduate students. Special consideration given to those students who do not qualify for a foreign student scholarship. Contact Office of International Education, Snell Hall 444. Scholarships M. Dale Chipman Memorial Presidential ROTC Scholarship Air Force ROTC First priority to students in the College of Agricultural Sciences majoring in Crop & Soil Science. Susan Christensen Memorial Presidential Scholarship First consideration for women in the College of Engineering. Sid Drew Memorial Engineering Presidential Scholarship $5000 for students from Nepal. Recipients must agree to become a "public servant" in Nepal engaged in an occupation designed to contribute to the welfare and development of Nepal. Must intend to return and serve Nepal for five years after graduation. Minimum GPA of 3.50. Contact the Office of International Education, Snell Hall 444. PRESIDENTIAL SCHOLARSHIPS Presidential Scholarships are merit based scholarships for undergraduate students who are Oregon high school graduates. Considerations include leadership activities, participation in special programs for outstanding students, and involvement in school and community activities. Scholarships are renewable for four years. Must have a minimum high school GPA of 3.75 plus 1100 composite SAT score. Financial need not considered. Number of scholar- ships and amounts vary according to payout of endowment. For more information on Presidential Scholarships, contact Erin Haynes, Director, OSU Fund, Snell Hall 517. A-Dec, Inc. Presidential Scholarship First preference for students from Newberg; second, for students from Yamhill County; third, for all other Oregon residents. Donald & Margaret Bailey Presidential Scholarship Ray & Corky Grewe Presidential Scholarship Any Major Scholarship Fritz Hartung Memorial Presidential Scholarship Students must pass a physical exam, maintain a grade point average of at least 2.0, and the student must graduate before turning 25. Open to any major. First priority for students in the College of Agricultural Sciences or the College of Veterinary Medicine. Grace Hensley Memorial Presidential Scholarship Robert Mac Vicar Presidential Scholarship Malheur/Harney County Presidential Scholarship First consideration to Oregon students from Harney and Malheur counties. Byram & Millicent Mayfield Memorial Presidential Scholarship First consideration for students studying Pharmacy. Thomas & Margaret Meehan Presidential Scholarship First preference for two-thirds of scholarships awarded to students in the College of Liberal Arts and one-third to students in the College of Science. Alice E. Morris Memorial Presidential Scholarship Oliphant Presidential Scholarship P. D. Ott Memorial Presidential Scholarship Florence Payton Memorial Presidential Scholarship Milosh & Jeanne Popovich Presidential Scholarship Realty Group Presidential Scholarship Robert Reisner Memorial Presidential Scholarship Nancy Chandler Memorial Presidential Scholarship Thomas & Anne Reynolds Presidential Scholarship Virginia Chiles Presidential Scholarship Military Science Scholarship Russell & Myrta Ebbert Memorial Presidential Scholarship Eric Boedtker Memorial Presidential Scholarship Preference for students in the College of Home Economics & Education. Approximately $500 based entirely on excellent character of students. Contact Air Force ROTC, Arnold Air Society Squadron, James L. Bradley, McAlexander Fieldhouse 308. Military Science ROTC For MS III and MS IV cadets attending OSU or WOSC. Minimum 2.50 overall GPA, with at least a 3.00 GPA in Military Science. Financial need considered. Contact LTC (Ret) Mike Rainbolt, College of Business Academic Adviser, 737-3716. First consideration for students in the College of Engineering. Hugh & Helen Wood Nepalese Scholarship Lt. James L. Badley Memorial Northwest Conclave/Arnold Air Society Award William Ruegg Memorial Presidential Scholarship Herb & Anita Summers Presidential Scholarship Ada A. Chipman Memorial Presidential First priority to students in the College of Scholarship Agricultural Sciences. Forrest Tower Memorial Presidential Scholarship Terry Watters Memorial Presidential Scholarship Dorothy & Dave Blasen Scholarship For an undergraduate or graduate student who is a member of Kappa Sigma Fraternity and active in Army ROTC. Contact Kappa Sigma Fraternity, OSU Chapter. National Competition Scholarship Army ROTC offers 2-, 3-, and 4-year national competition merit scholarships. Each pays full tuition, a book allowance of $150 per term, laboratory and incidental fees, a book allowance of $150 per term, laboratory and incidental fees, and $100 subsistence each school month for the term of the scholarship. The four-year scholarships are awarded to selected high school seniors or to recent high school graduates. High school students interested in applying should consult their school counselors or call the Department of Military Science by the end of the junior year or early in the senior year. Open Scholarships Three, two or guaranteed reserve forces on campus scholarships are available to selected University freshmen and sophomores, whether or not they are enrolled in ROTC courses. These scholarships have the same benefits as listed above. Full information on Army scholarships may be obtained by contacting the Department of Military Science at (503) 737-3511. Housing and Residence Hall Programs The Department of Student Housing and Residence Programs provides a diverse selection of housing alternativesUniversity-owned student cooperatives, residence halls, and student family housing-all of which offer a variety of programs and services. INTRODUCTION Through the central housing office, students can make arrangements for meals and accommodations, consult with educational programs staff, bring suggestions for improvements, work out financial details, and receive assistance on their concerns and interests. Emphasis is upon providing attractive, safe, reasonably priced living accommodations and programs which satisfy residents' desires for both privacy and community. Student Housing's main goals are to help students succeed academically, become active citizens of their communities, and enrich and enjoy their University experience. COOPERATIVE HOUSES The eight cooperative houses at Oregon State University provide small-group living experiences for approximately 400 students. House capacities vary from 40 to 60. Student residents are responsible for developing their internal governmental organizations. Incoming students receive help from returning cooperative members in adjusting to the University and to the unique, dynamic atmosphere of the cooperative. Cooperative members reduce their board-and-room costs by performing work duties of three to five hours per week in the houses. Oregon State University owns and operates six cooperative houses: Azalea House, Oxford House, and Reed Lodge for women; and Avery Lodge and Heckart Lodge for men. Dixon Lodge is for upperclass men and women. Beaver Lodge and Varsity House are independently owned and accommodate men. All cooperatives are members of the InterCooperative Council (ICC). Information and application forms may be obtained from the Department of Student Housing and Residence Programs or from the individual houses. RESIDENCE HALLS Through its 20 residence halls and the College Inn, the University offers a variety of living environments including halls for women only, several co-educational living areas, and a graduate student housin program. Bloss Hall and the College Inn are reserved for transfer students and students who are beyond their freshman year, while West International House has been designated for U.S. and foreign students 21 or older. In addition, the "Quiet Place" in McNary Hall emphasizes quiet and privacy. A Women in Engineering and Science program has been established in Wilson Hall and Finley and features a Wellness program.Students interested in the College Inn, which is located at the north edge of campus, should write directly to College Inn, 155 N.W. Kings Blvd., Corvallis, OR 97330. Most student rooms are designed for double occupancy. Single room as well as "dou- 45 ble-as-single" rooms are available in each hall at special rates. For more detailed descriptions of residence halls and the rules and regulations that apply, please see the Residence Hall Handbook. TOM SCHEUERMANN RESIDENCE HALL AND PAULETTE RITCHFORD TERRI TOWER Associate Director Assistant Director COOPERATIVE RESERVATIONS A reservation in a residence hall or cooperative may be made anytime during the calendar year. Students submit a contract and applicatio fee for residence halls or a separate application for cooperatives. Both types of contracts are available from the Department of Student Housing and Residence Programs. Call (503) 737-4771 and acontract will be mailed to you promptly. RESIDENCE HALL RATES NOTE: The figures listed below are room and board rates for 1992-93. Figures for the 199394 academic year were not available at the time of publication. When established, the new rates will be available through the Department of Student Housing and Residence Programs.I Design Double as Regular Residence Single Single Double Ha112 $4,096 $3,716 $3,306 Standard 4,196 3,816 3,406 Bloss 4,146 3,766 3,356 Sackett 3,666 3,256 Weatherford Hawley (Graduate Students) Director 4,046 3,110 All listed 1992-93 rates are for room and the standard meal plan. Hawley/graduate room includes 5 meals per week plan; other meal plans available. All Oregon State University residence halls and dining facilities are built and operated entirely with income from resident students and summer conferences and camps. No state tax funds are used. HOUSING FOR STUDENTS OVER 21 AND GRADUATE STUDENTS Housing facilities for men and women students over 21 years of age are provided in West Hall, which has been designated "International House" to add a world community emphasis to the programs and activities of this living group. West International House is located on 30th Street across from Peavy Hall. Graduate students and those over 21 may live in any of the other residence halls as space is available. Graduate students (only) may also choose Hawley Hall. UNIVERSITY HOUSING FOR STUDENT FAMILIES (ALL TERMS) Oregon State University maintains 94 furnished apartments in Orchard Court for student families. Rentals start at approximately $200 a month with water, garbage, and TV cable service furnished. Approximately 30 unfurnished, miscellaneous units in the community are also available. Students should apply to the Department of Student Housing and Residence Programs. KEN JAMES Housing Physical Plant Superintendent 46 Housing HOUSING IN SUMMER SESSION Two residence halls are available for summer session students. Older students are welcome and will be assigned to floors accommodating only older students wherever possible. A room-only option is available for West Hall. OFF-CAMPUS HOUSING The Office of the Dean of Students and the Memorial Union maintain current bulletin board listings of a variety of rentals available in Corvallis and surrounding communities to help students locate off-campus housing accommodations. Apartment renters' guides, handbooks containing pertinent legal information, and other related materials are available to pick up at the office. A copy of current listings may be obtained upon request. Send $2 and indicate the type of rental being sought. FRATERNITIES AND SORORITIES The 26 fraternities and 15 sororities at Oregon State University offer men and women the opportunity to choose a small living group experience within the total University-recognized housing program. Fraternities and sororities for the most part are private, nonprofit organizations whose chapter houses are located within a mile radius of campus. Two sororities do not live in a chapter house. Board and room rates approximate those of Universityowned residence halls. Extra costs include initial affiliation expenses, social fees, and, in some instances, building fund charges. Membership in the Greek letter societies is by invitation and is based upon mutual choice. "Rush" (the process of member selection) for all groups is sponsored by Interfraternity (men's) and Panhellenic (women's) Councils immediately before the beginning of fall term classes and informally at other times throughout the academic year. Fraternity pledges can expect to live in the chapter houses provided they haven't made prior, binding contractual agreements to live elsewhere. Materials concerning fraternities and rush are sent to all men admitted to Oregon State University. Specific questions concerning rush registration should be directed to Interfraternity Council (IFC), A 200, Administrative Services Building (503) 737-5432. Information about sororities and rush is automatically sent to admitted women. If a woman who plans to attend OSU does not receive a rush booklet she may request one from Panhellenic Council, A200, Administrative Services Building. Note: Registration for formal rush should be received by September 1. HOUSING REQUIRED FOR FRESHMEN Oregon State University recognizes the impact the living environment has upon student life. This environment, whether on or off campus, is an important part of the student's educational experience. The University is committed to providing the entering student in the residential setting an integrated program for social, cultural, and educational development beyond the classroom. To ensure that the student has the opportunity for this development, the University has established the following regulation: "Freshmen unaccompanied by dependents who enroll at Oregon State University within one year of high school graduation must live in University cooperatives, residence halls, fraternities, or sororities. Exceptions may be requested through the Department of Student Housing and include, but are not limited to, the following: living with relatives, medical or psychological reasons, working for room and board, or equivalent group living experience." Transfer students are not required to live in University housing, but they may find it easier to make friends if they live on campus for a term or two. Counseling and Advising MULTICULTURAL AFFAIRS Indian Education Coordinator OSU. Advisers also assist students whose academic progress is unsatisfactory and refer them to other University services that also provide assistance. Head advisers for each school or college are listed in this catalog The Office of Multicultural Affairs assists the University in promoting cultural diversity and awareness throughout the campus community. Its programs, services, and activities LAWRENCE GRIGGS PHYLLIS LEE Director CASSANDRA MANUELITO-KERKVLIET promote ethnic and cultural identity within a multicultural environment, and encourage and support cooperative relationships among ethnic groups and between those groups and the mainstream University population. The staff provides consulting and resource services to all academic and support units, student organizations, and University administration as well as communities represented in the student body on issues and concerns related to cultural diversity. In addition to programming and services which focus on recruitment, retention, and achievements of African American, Asian American, Hispanic American and Native American students and faculty, collaborative and cooperative efforts involve all members of the campus community. Students are invited to visit the office, located in Snell 330, for more details about activities and programs. COUNSELING CENTER MORRIS LEMAY Director LESLIE G. DUNNINGTON Assistant Director Counseling services are available to all students in the Counseling and Testing Center. Services include: Counseling. Counselors assist students in making decisions about educational plans, career goals, personal concerns, relationships, and other problems. The first six visits are free of charge; the seventh and subsequent visits will be assessed a nominal fee. All counseling is confidential; information is not released unless authorized by the student. Academic and Career Planning. The center has a folder for each academic major containing general career information and specific academic requirements. Career interest tests and the computerized career guidance program SIGI PLUS are also available at a nominal fee. The career Decision-Making class (LS 114) is offered each term. This course allows students to explore career options with the guidance of our counselors. Academic Advising.The University Exploratory Studies Program offers individualized advising and counseling to students who need assistance in choosing a major and setting career goals. Advisers assist students with long- and short-range academic and career planning; provide information on curricula, schedule planning, educational options and University requirements at and in the Schedule of Classes. EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES PROGRAM Director Oregon State University's Educational Opportunities Program (EOP) is designed to recruit to the University and assist in the retention of minority, disadvantaged, and disabled students who have traditionally been denied equal access to higher education. EOP serves those who may or may not meet the current University admission requirements but are recognized as having the potential to successfully complete a college degree program. EOP recruits within Oregon communities with concentrations of ethnic minority and non-traditional students. Recruited and referred students are assisted in gaining admission to the University. As a part of retention, students are provided information about available financial aid and given academic placement testing, tutoring, and counseling. After arrival on campus, the particular needs of the individual student are identified from placement tests, academic records, and information obtained from the student. An academic plan of tutoring, counseling, and advising is developed which determines the nature of the student's participation in FOR The plan is subject to continual reexamination and may be revised at any time by the student and staff together. United States citizens or permanent residents interested in participating in the program may write to the Educational Opportunities Program, OSU, Waldo Hall 337, Corvallis, OR 97331-6405. SPECIAL SERVICES PROJECT LITA J. VERTS Director Special Services Project (SSP) is a federally sponsored academic assistance program for those from low-income backgrounds, whose parents did not graduate from a college or university, or who are physically handicapped. SSP provides counseling, tutoring, and access to basic-skills building classes. Students have access to a learning center and a learning laboratory. The program also sponsors cultural enrichment activities. United States citizens or permanent residents may inquire about the program at Waldo Hall, Room 337. VETERANS' SERVICES AND VETERANS' REFERRAL CENTER The Veterans' Referral Center is an organization of student veterans serving other 47 student veterans. The center provides referral information relating to the specific needs of the veteran community. Special attention is paid to VA benefits, personal finances, food stamps, part-time employment, readjustment to civilian and academic life, academic policies affecting veterans, and community relations. Presenting veterans' needs and problems to such institutions as the Associated Students and the Veterans Administration is also an integral function of the Veterans' Referral Center. Veterans' Clerk The veterans' clerk serves veterans by certifying their attendance at Oregon State University. All veterans, whether new, returning, or transfer students, who expect to receive benefits from the Veterans Administration must notify the veterans' clerk in the Registrar's Office. The amount of benefits varies with the number of credits taken. Details are available from the veterans' clerk. The veterans' clerk also administers the progress standards for students who are receiving VA benefits. See Progress Standards for Veteran Students for more information on these standards. State Educational Aid The state of Oregon has an educational aid program available to Oregon veterans who meet eligibility requirements. The state benefit may not be received for training for which the veteran is currently receiving the federal GI Bill. Information about this aid program may be obtained from the Department of Veterans' Affairs, Education Section, General Services Building, Salem, OR 97310, (503) 378-6840. NEW STUDENT PROGRAMS J. FRANz HAUN Director The Office of New Student Programs coordinates orientation activities for new and prospective undergraduates. Programs coordinated by the office include Open House, the Summer Orientation and Advising program, Moms' and Dads' programs, and a freshman orientation class. The office also coordinates on-campus visits for prospective students. New Student Programs Before officially registering for their first term, undergraduate students participate in a program of orientation and advising. Each year, OSU holds several sessions of orientation and advising for new students. Four two-day sessions for freshmen and two oneday transfer sessions are offered in the summer (June and July) where students register for classes as part of the orientation programs. Others are scheduled for the period immediately preceding the opening of fall, winter, and spring terms. Detailed information is sent to all admitted undergraduate students well in advance of the term of entrance. Support Services, LEARNING AND RESOURCE CENTERS Scattered across campus are learning centers to help students develop general study skills, increase their knowledge of a particular field, or prepare for specific course assignments. Most offer specialized library resources and self-paced learning materials; some offer tutoring, workshops, and access to equipment. The Communication Skills Center offers a free drop-in writing lab and tutored programs in grammar, spelling, and punctuation. In addition, a number of free or low-cost courses are scheduled in reading and study skills. The Mathematical Sciences Learning Center provides assistance in all lower-division mathematics courses and in selected statistics courses. Help is available on a drop-in basis during both weekday and weekend hours. Study materials, reference texts, and microcomputers are available. Independent study sections of some courses are also available. Staff members advise living groups and student organizations, aid students experiencing emergencies, work with the student and faculty off-campus housing service, and coordinate the Minority Scholar Program. The staff works with students experiencing conduct or behavior problems, coordinates services for disabled students, provides assistance to older students and commuter students, coordinates the Women's Center, administers the National Student Exchange program, and oversees the OSU Child Care Center. The Office of the Dean of Students makes available to the university community data regarding student growth and development as well as data on student demographics and provides consultation to faculty, parents, and community members on a wide range of issues and concerns. CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT CENTER SHIRLEY GREGORY Director The University Learning Center and Language Laboratory, located in Kidder Hall, DIANE DUNGAN Room 28, is operated by the Communication Media Center. The center is available for students to study materials placed in it by their instructors. It was recently remodeled and has 72 audio carrels for language and other audio learning, and 36 other carrels with the capability of small group and independent video instruction, computer assisted instruction, playing video discs, slide-tapes, and interactive video instruction. Other colleges, departments, or programs offering learning and resource centers include animal science, business, chemistry, the Counseling Center, botany and plant pathology, education, the Educational Opportunities Program, forestry, geography, health, home economics, foreign languages, music, political science, and philosophy. OFFICE OF THE DEAN OF STUDENTS MARGARET MANOOGIAN-O'DELL J. ROGER PENN Associate Vice President and Dean of Student WILLIAM J. BRENNAN Assistant Dean NANCY M. VANDERPOOL Assistant Dean TRACY BENTLEY Director of Services for Students with Disabilities The Office of the Dean of Students has the responsibility of providing for and promoting the general welfare of all OSU students. Located within the office is the Associate Vice President for Student Affairs and Dean of Students as well as other staff members who coordinate numerous programs and provide personalized assistance and advising to students, parents, and faculty. Head of Cooperative Education, Adviser Adviser Cooperative Education Internships (sophomores, juniors, seniors, and graduate students) Cooperative education internships enable students to enhance their knowledge, personal development, and professional preparation. Co-op internships blend academic study with productive employment in business, industry, government, or social service agencies. Co-op draws on a variety of resources and returns benefits to the student, to the employer, to the community, and to the University. Annually, over 3,000 co-op internships in more than 900 businesses and agencies throughout Oregon, the nation, and the world are received by the center. Developing placements. Field placements are directly related to the student's career and educational goals and are most often jointly supervised by a faculty coordinator and the placement site supervisor. Placements may be full or part time. Students may earn from 3 to 16 credits through courses numbered 410 or 510. Work periods alternate with lass work between the sophomore and senior years or during graduate studies. Students should contact the Career Planning and Placement Center or the faculty adviser in their academic department for information regarding participation in these programs. The Career Planning and Placement Center provides a full array of career services and resources for undergraduates, graduates, and alumni. COMPUTER FACILITIES Placement Services Students at Oregon State have access to a (undergraduates, graduate students, and wide variety of computer resources, from alumni) microcomputers to supercomputers, Each year, more than 350 employers interthroughout the University. University Comview students and alumni in the OSU puting Services (UCS) operates four mainCareer Planning and Placement Center. In frame systems for academic use. There are addition to interview services, the center four general access microcomputer facilities maintains student and alumni placement available to students at no charge. The files; provides individual advising on careers microcomputer systems are networked so and job placement; and presents sessions on that they can act as workstations to access writing resumes, interviewing techniques, campus mainframes and other facilities job search strategies, co-op internships, onnationally and internationally. The College campus interviewing, and, in conjunction of Business facility contains 89 Leading Edge with Liberal Studies, special academic cours- and Hewlett-Packard Vectra systems; the es (LS 314 and LS 399) spring terms. Up-toComputer Science facility contains 40 Macdate information on the job market is intosh systems and nine Hewlett-Packard provided, and more than 850 binders of 150 systems; the Milne facility contains 20 company information are available for stuIBM XT, 18 IBM PS2/30, and 18 Apple Macdent use. Last year, the center received intosh systems; and the Kerr Library facility notices of more than 17,000 job vacancies houses 66 Macintosh SE systems and 33 IBM which were listed in the twice-weekly PS2 systems. This last facility contains laser newsletter, job File, and/or posted in the printers and is open 24 hours per day, seven center and academic departments. Typewrit- days a week during the regular academic ers are available for preparation of materials. year. A job match system is available, providIn addition, many individual colleges, ing employers with a list of those students schools, and departments at OSU have their registered who meet the employer's request- own computer facilities for use by students ed qualifications. Also available are three and faculty. computerized employment data banks. With thousands of individual computers and mainframe computer terminals located all over the campus, OSU students and faculty don't have to look far for the computer resources they need. Support Services WOMEN'S CENTER The Women's Center provides personalized assistance and referral services primarily to women students. A wide range of program offerings encourage academic achievement, leadership development, and the consideration of current issues of importance to women and men in the academic community. The center, which is located in Benton Annex between Benton Hall and the Pharmacy Building, provides a study lounge, meeting rooms, and an extensive library on women's issues. Ongoing programs include a speaker series, conferences and workshops, discussion sessions, film series, and peer assistance and referral. Coordination and support are provided through the Office of the Dean of Students. SERVICES FOR STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES Through the Office of the Dean of Students, the University offers a program of services for students with disabilities. Note-takers, interpreters for the deaf, reader help, and visual-aid equipment ("Visualtek" and "Optacon") for low vision and legally blind students are among the services available to students with disabilities at OSU. Also offered are help with registration, housing arrangements, and other special needs. These and other services are described in Services for Students with Disabilities, a brochure available from the Office of the Dean of Students. The brochure includes information about people to contact for assistance and a brief description of available services. For more information about any of these services, contact the Office of the Dean of Students, Room A200, Administrative Services Building (737-3661 or T.D.D. 737-3666). _r. NATIONAL STUDENT EXCHANGE PROGRAM Through the National Student Exchange (NSE) academically qualified students are given the opportunity to spend up to one academic year at another school while paying in-state tuition rates. Grades and credits earned during the exchange become a part of each student's OSU transcript. Over 100 colleges and universities across the country currently participate in the National Student Exchange program. While on exchange, students have the opportunity to experience a different learning environment, to broaden social and cultural awareness, and to live in another part of the United States. OSU students who have gone on exchange often describe the opportunity as the highlight of their college career and one of the most meaningful times of their lives. To qualify, a student must be a) an Oregon resident; b) a full-time student in good standing with a 2.50 cumulative grade-point average at the time of application and during the quarter prior to exchange; and c) an undergraduate who has earned at least 45 hours of credit at the time the exchange begins. Each year applications are available beginning December 1 and are due March 1 in the Office of the Dean of Students. CHILD CARE SERVICES The Child Care Center at OSU is located at 11th & Adams and is a full-day child care center for children of students, staff and faculty. There are 152 full-time spaces for infants through Kindergarten. Child care may be purchased in segments of half-time and flex-time in addition to full-time. The center is operated by Kinder-Care-At-Work, Inc. Some subsidy for students is available. 49 Further information may be obtained by calling the center (737-4641) or the Dean of Students' Office (737-3661). Two pre-school classes are available at the OSU Child Develpment Center, and information regarding other child care services in the area, family contact/emergency, etc., is available in the Dean of Students' Office. ENGLISH LANGUAGE INSTITUTE ALLEN SELLERS Director General Information The primary function of the English Language Institute is to help provide students with the broad range of language, academic, and cultural skills necessary for competent study at an American college or university. The institute offers intensive ESL instruction in a variety of multilevel courses: vocabulary and reading, structure, writing, speech, lis- tening comprehension, and academic preparation. The ELI is supported wholly by student tuition, and enrollment is about evenly divided between privately supported students and those who are sponsored by international organizations or foreign governments. The academic experience is supplemented by social, cultural, and recreational activities. The American conversant program furnishes an opportunity for at least one hour a week of conversation with native speakers, usually University students. Students at the English Language Institute have the same privileges as regularly enrolled American students in the use of campus recreational facilities, library, bookstore, and student health and counseling services. Provisional admission to OSU Foreign students who are academically acceptable may be granted provisional admission to OSU if they have a TOEFL score from 500 to 549. Provisionally admitted students are tested by the ELI upon their arrival on campus and a recommendation is made as to their course of study. In most cases these students can study part time at OSU and part time at the ELI. Diagnostic testing The ELI conducts the on-campus testing of English language proficiency for those foreign students who have been provisionally admitted to OSU. (See Admission of Foreign Students.) Based on this language assessment, the ELI recommends English language course work appropriate to the individual. Special programs The Division of Special Programs of the English Language Institute operates on the basis of proposals submitted to it by foreign educational missions, embassies, and international organizations. Unlike the ELI's ongoing core curriculum in general language skills development, curricula developed by the Division of Special Programs serve the specific needs of sponsored trainees. s Support Services Professional Student Exchange Program (PSEP) The Professional Student Exchange Program enables students in 13 western states (Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming) to enroll in professional programs not available in their home state. The fields of study in this program are architecture, dentistry, graduate library studies, graduate nursing, law, medicine, occupational therapy, optometry, osteopathic medicine, pharmacy, physical therapy, podiatry, public health, and veterinary medicine. The Oregon State System of Higher Education participation in WICHE enables qualified Oregon resident students to apply for WICHE STUDENT EXCHANGE PROGRAM Western Undergraduate Exchange Program (WUE) The Western Undergraduate Exchange (WUE) program offers the opportunity for students in 12 participating states to enroll in designated two-year and four-year academic majors in selected institutions at reduced tuition levels. States participating in the Western Undergraduate Exchange are: Alaska, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming. Programs open to WUE eligible students new to OSU, on a space available basis, include: College of Agriculture B.S. in Animal Science (Poultry Option) B.S. in Food Science and Technology College of Engineering B.S. in Nuclear Engineering College of Forestry B.S. in Forest Engineering B.S. in Forest Management B.S. in Forest Products B.S. in Forest Recreation Resources College of Health and Human Performance B.S. in Environmental Health and Safety B.S. in Exercise and Sport Science B.S. in Health Care Administration B.S. in Health Promotion and Education College of Home Economics and Education B.S. in Apparel Design B.S. in Family Finance and Consumer Studies B.S. in Home Economics Communication B.S. in Nutrition and Food Management Options in: Dietetics, Food Systems Management, Foods in Business, and Nutrition Science Additional information is available from the Office of Admissions. Western Regional Graduate Program (WRGP) Residents of Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming are eligi- ble to enroll at resident rates of tuition in distinctive graduate programs. There is no requirement that students meet financial aid criteria. Graduate programs are distinctive in the sense that they are uncommon and, through a regional review process are found to be of high quality. Programs are nominated by their institutions, reviewed by other graduate institutions in the participating states, and selected by the WRGP Advisory Council, a policy body that represents all participating states. Programs open to WRGP eligible students new to OSU include: Family Resource Management (Ph.D.) Genetics Program (M.S., Ph.D.) Human Development and Family Studies (Ph.D.) Marine Resource Management (M.A., M.S.) Nutrition and Food Management (Ph.D.) Oceanography (M.A., M.S., Ph.D.) Operations Research (M.A., M.S.) Poultry Science (M.Agr., M.S., Ph.D.) Toxicology (M.S., Ph.D.) Interested students should apply for admission and for WRGP tuition status directly to the program director. Applicants must identify themselves as "WICHE WRGP" appli- cants. Additional information about this program and a list of contact persons for the graduate programs listed above are available from the Graduate School Office. training at designated institutions (most in other states) in the following fields: graduate library studies, occupational therapy, optometry, osteopathic medicine, physical therapy, podiatry, and public health-nutrition. OSU provides opportunities for students from participating states to major in pharmacy and veterinary medicine. In most programs, WICHE students receive preference in admission and pay resident tuition at state-supported institutions (or reduced tuition at private institutions). Students apply to the certifying office in their home state for certification in fields in which the state supports its residents through the Professional Student Exchange Program. The student then applies for admission to the participating university of their choice. Students from Oregon must make application as Oregon residents prior to October 15 of the year preceding the academic year of anticipated enrollment. WICHE certification does not guarantee admission. The WICHE Professional Student Exchange Program applies only to the professional years of schooling; pre-professional study is not included. This is not a scholarship program, but an extension of the educational opportunities that each state offers its residents. Additional information and forms for application and certification for Oregon resident students may be obtained by writing to: Certifying Officer, WICHE Student Exchange Program, P.O. Box 3175, Eugene, OR 97403. Interested nonresident student applicants should contact the Certifying Officer in their home state. COMMUNICATION MEDIA CENTER JON ROOT Director The Communication Media Center (CMC) is OSU's centralized instructional media service. The primary focus of the CMC is to provide resident faculty with a broad range of instructional media resources to strengthen instructional processes and thereby enhance student achievement through the use of current instructional technology methods and materials in the classroom. The CMC supports the development of Support Services instructional lessons using television, slidetapes and other types of media; the production of print and projection media including graphic, photographic, and transparent instructional materials; the distribution and operation of media (A-V and TV) equipment; the repair of electronic media equipment; the scheduling and rental of video and film programs; and the distribution of video-taped programs via the Corvallis community cable system and a campus closedcircuit system. A computer graphic arts service is available for outputting high quality computer generated color slides and overhead transparencies. "AV Online," a computer-based directory of media programs can be accessed at CMC to assist faculty in locating desired instructional materials. The Communication Media Center, through telecommunications systems, provides distance delivery of live classes to limited remote locations. Two classrooms have been designed specifically for this purpose. The CMC also has satellite down-link receiving equipment for teleconferencing and receiving instructional programs. CMC produces satellite teleconferences for OSU departments,for state and national distribution. Technical support and faculty assistance for the use of the Oregon Ed-Net telecommunication system is provided by CMC. The CMC also operates the University Learning Center. Instructional departments are encouraged to deposit audio-visual selfinstructional materials for student use in the University Learning Center. The University's video library is housed in the University Learning Center. In addition to the above services, consultation, seminars, and workshops are available featuring current information, methods, and techniques concerning the different types of communication media. This service includes presentations about preparation of instructional materials, purchase of media equipment, methods of presentation, design of classrooms and buildings, design of instructional research proposals as they relate to media use and production, use of Oregon Ed-Net and distance education, and other media-related topics. The Communication Media Center administers the Photographic Service located in Weniger Hall and the University Graphic Art Service in Kidder Hall for noninstructional photography and graphic arts requirements. Television production, electronic equipment maintenance and repair, and electronic media equipment rental are also available for research, administration, public relations, and other noninstructional activities. There is a charge for noninstructional service. STUDENT HEALTH CENTER JAYNE ACKERMAN, M.D. Director SUSAN LONGERBEAM Associate Director Student Health Services provides medical and wellness (health promotion and education) services to OSU students. Outpatient clinic services are available in general medicine, mental health, gynecology and sexual health, allergy, recreational sports, and travel. A self care clinic exists for the self treatment of colds and flu. The health center also provides pharmacy, x-ray, physical therapy, and laboratory services. An inpatient unit is available to students on a 24-hour basis. Monday through Friday (as of 92-93). All outpatient services are open Monday through Friday during posted hours. In addition, a Saturday clinic is available. Health promotion and education services reflect the college health orientation of Student Health Services. Individual and group tailored programs are available in the following areas: nutrition, fitness, stress management, substance abuse, eating disorders, sexual health, and other topics as needed. Students interested in health care can become further involved with the health center as peer educators (HOPE), and as Student Health Advisory Group members. Student Health Services are accessible to all OSU registered students who have paid the student health fee. Confidential care is provided by physicians, nurse practitioners, and other health care professionals. Students are encouraged to become established with a primary care provider. Outpatient visits, including mental health visits and appointments with health educators, are provided by the health fee. User fees apply for all other ancillary services. Expenses incurred at community medical facilities outside of the health center are the responsibility of the student. Immunization and Medical History Requirement Students are encouraged to satisfy all immunization requirements before arriving at OSU. Proof of immunity is currently required for Measles, Mumps, and Rubella. In addition, most international students are required to have a tuberculin test upon arrival at OSU. ASOSU Health Insurance Accident and Sickness Insurance) Students are urged to ensure their financial security with health insurance. Many students do not have adequate health insurance coverage. The Associated Students of OSU sponsors a group plan (MEGA Life), at low cost for students and their families. The plan is coordinated with Student Health Services: covered expenses at the health center are at 100%, and no deductible applies. Inpatient expenses at the local hospital (Good Samaritan) are covered at 90%. More information and enrollment forms can be obtained at the Student Health Services Insurance Office, 737-7568 Immunization and Medical History Requirement A prior medical examination is not required of entering students. A medical history summary is required and proof of measles and rubella immunity will be required of all new incoming students prior to registering. Students entering the University from foreign countries are required to have a tuberculin test and/or chest x-ray at the health center on entrance to the University. This requirement must be met regardless of whether the student has been screened for tuberculosis in his or her home country. Insurance Although personal health insurance is recommended to cover major medical expenses, students do not need to have health insurance to use Student Health Center services. The ASOSU sponsors a student insurance policy which may be purchased during registration or from the MU business office. This insurance is independent of the Health Center. ASOSU Accident and Sickness Insurance The Associated Students of Oregon State University offer a Students' and Dependents' Accident and Sickness Medical Expense Plan to students at registration or at the Memorial Union Business Office until the final day of registration. Premium costs have been kept relatively low to meet students' needs. Participants in activities, including athletic events such as the recreational sports program, who are registered at the Student Activities Center must have accident insurance coverage. This coverage may be in the form of ASOSU student insurance or personal policies. Information about insurance may be obtained at the Memorial Union Business Office. Honor and Recognition Societies 52 ORGANIZATION General Honor Societies Alpha Lambda Delta Blue Key DATE MEN/WOMEN DATE ESTABLISHED NATIONALLY ESTABLISHED AT OSU Both 1924 1933 Both 1924 1934 Senior leadership Junior leadership TYPE OR FIELD OF INTEREST Freshmen scholarship Cardinal Honors Mortar Board Phi Eta Sigma Phi Kappa Phi Both 1932 1979 Both 1918 1933 Senior leadership Both 1923 1949 Both 1897 1924 Sigma Xi Both 1886 1937 Freshman scholarship Scholarship Science research Both 1963 1975 Both 1949 1969 Agricultural Engineering Industrial Engineering Both 1919 1959 Accounting Both 1913 1963 Business Both 1930 1931 Both 1904 1921 Both 1911 1928 Both 1910 1976 Both 1915 1979 Both 1912 1919 Both 1921 1980 Both 1920 1978 Both 1906 1962 Pi Tau Sigma Both 1916 1941 Rho Chi Sigma Delta Pi Sigma Pi Sigma Sigma Tau Delta Both 1908 1922 Both 1919 1970 Both 1921 1934 Both 1924 1981 Tau Beta Pi Both 1885 1924 Xi Sigma Pi Both 1908 1921 Vocational/Industrial Engineering Electrical Engineering Education Journalism Economics Home Economics History Political Science French Mechanical Engineering Pharmacy Spanish Physics English Engineering Forestry Both 1897 1918 Both 1967 1979 Both 1879 1911 Women 1913 1930 Both 1924 1924 Both 1893 1982 Both 1909 1925 Speech Women 1893 1967 Journalism Both 1957 1961 Both 1947 1951 Air Force Air Force Both Women ........ 1916 1959 1960 Athletic greeters Greeks Departmental Honor Societies Alpha Epsilon Alpha Pi Mu Beta Alpha Psi Beta Gamma Sigma Epsilon Pi Tau Eta Kappa Nu Kappa Delta Pi Kappa Tau Alpha Omicron Delta Upsilon Omicron Nu Phi Alpha Theta Phi Sigma Alpha Pi Delta Phi Professional Fraternities Alpha Zeta Eta Sigma Gamma Kappa Psi Lambda Kappa Sigma Phi Chi Theta Phi Delta Chi Women in Comm. Zeta Phi Eta Recognition Societies Angel Flight Arnold Air Society Beaver Believers Iota Sigma Pi Agriculture Health Science Pharmacy Pharmacy Business Pharmacy Chemistry Order of Omega Phi Lambda Upsilon Both 1967 1976 Both 1899 1928 Chemistry, Biochemistry, and Chemical Engineering Phi Sigma Scabbard and Blade Both 1915 1933 Men 1904 1920 Biology Military Both 1924 1980 Other Societies Society of Amer Mil Engrs Swords of Honor Talons Thanes Both Women Men 1918 1980 Military Military 1933 Service 1936 Service Summer Session and Continuing Higher Education DEBORAH J. BIRD OFFICE OF CONTINUING HIGHER EDUCATION Assistant Director Summer Session The Office of Continuing Higher Education (OCHE) provides a variety of extended and campus-based educational programs for nontraditional students. Credit and non0 credit courses, seminars, and workshops are offered throughout Oregon. An extended degree program is currently offered in Bend, and an OSU evening/weekend degree program in Liberal Studies is available for students who are unable to attend daytime classes. OCHE also coordinates televised courses in cooperation with the OSU Communication Media Center. The Individualized Directed Learning (IDL) program provides independent study SUMMER SESSION Summer Session offers students the chance to begin, continue, or advance their education through more than 400 courses in 70 departments from agriculture to zoology. Courses range in length from two days to 11 weeks, with the majority running eight weeks. Most departments also offer independent study projects, e.g. research, reading and conference, thesis, internship, etc. The typical full-time summer course load for undergraduates is 12 credits; for graduates, 9 credits. Additional credits may be taken with the dean's approval. Anyone can register for Summer Session classes because there are no admission requirements-they don't even have to apply. Students who wish to be admitted to begin their degree course work during Summer Session must apply for admission by midMay. For details and deadlines, contact Admissions at (503) 737-4411. Non-resident students enjoy considerable tuition savings because there are no out-ofstate fees during summer. Residents and non-residents pay the same tuition. The Summer Session Bulletin, published in early spring, contains current information on summer courses and schedule, registration procedures, tuition, housing, services and facilities, etc. For your free copy of the Summer Session Bulletin, contact the Summer Session Office (503) 737-2676 or stop by Snell Hall 327. courses for undergraduates while they are away from campus. Approximately 50 IDL courses are offered by OSU faculty. Noncredit programs include precollege algebra courses for students needing additional instruction before entering collegelevel mathematics. OCHE also provides a range of conference and consulting services, including specialized credit and noncredit programs in business, industry, and other educational organizations. OSU's Elderhostel program, a summer academic opportunity for older adults, is coordinated by OCHE. Credits earned through Continuing Higher Education are generally applicable toward OSU undergraduate and graduate degree programs. Students should consult their academic adviser concerning specific academic requirements. For more information about available programs and services, please contact the Office of Continuing Higher Education, 327 Snell Hall. 'Mi DAN DUNHAM Director Office of Continuing Higher Education II 01 The Office of International Education (OIE) provides the leadership for Oregon State University's involve- ment in a wide range of international activities: the exchange of students and faculty, cooperative research and learning experiences around the world, international curriculum development, and the development of global perspectives and understanding among nations and peoples. The OIE offers logistical and administrative support for the University's interna- tional activities. INTERNATIONAL STUDENT AND SCHOLAR PROGRAMS The OIE provides a wide range of programs and services for the international students and scholars on the OSU campus. At present there are more than 1400 students and 200 scholars from 92 countries at Oregon State University. It also sponsors educational and cultural programs for the University and Corvallis community. The Office of International Education provides special assistance to international students. The staff offers an orientation program for new students; provides liaison with University, community, and international sponsoring offices; advises on immigration and other governmental regulations, medical insurance coverage, and cultural and personal matters; helps with financial certifications for the transfer of funds from other countries; and advises on the University's policy of provisional admission because of English deficiency. The office conducts workshops of interest to international students on such issues as practical training, American culture, taxes and re-entry, as well as workshops for the community on crosscultural awareness and concerns. The OIE also provides leadership for a wide variety of cross-cultural activities to enrich the experience of international students on campus and in the community. Among the cooperating organzations are Crossroads International (a community organization), West International Hall (an OSU residence hall for international and American students), and the International Students of Oregon State University (ISOSU-a student organization). Crossroads International, with members from the Corvallis community, provides home visits for new international students, Friendship Home contacts, conversation groups and partners for students and their spouses. Study Abroad and Exchange Programs OSU students may broaden their education by taking part in study abroad programs. All of the programs listed below allow qualified students from a wide variety of disciplines to earn academic credit from Oregon State University while pursuing their studies abroad. Not only do students earn OSU credit, but they can apply their financial aid to help cover the costs. More information about each of the following programs can be obtained in the Office of International Education, Snell Hall 444 (737-3006). Australia, Bathurst. Students of all majors may study for a year at Charles Sturt University-Mitchell in Bathurst, three hours inland from Sydney. Australia, Roseworthy. Agriculture Science students may study for a half-year or year (February - December) at the Roseworthy College Campus of the University of Adelaide in South Australia. Courses are offered in Agriculture and Natural Resources. Australia, Sydney. Undergraduate business majors can spend three terms at the University of Technology in Sydney. Canada, Vancouver. College of Agricultural Sciences students can spend their junior year at the University of British Columbia. China, Beijing. The Fall semester program in China, at the Central Institute of Nationalities in Beijing, combines intensive language study with courses in Chinese minority cultures. A 16-day study tour to several minority regions is also included. There is no language prerequisite. Denmark, Aarhus. College of Business students may earn their international business certificate by studying fall term in Aarhus, Denmark. Each year, approximately 20 students are exchanged. Denmark, Copenhagen. M.B.A. students may spend fall semester at the Copenhagen Business School. I 3, Ecuador, Quito. Students may study in Ecuador for the fall term or for the full year. During the fall, students live with a host family while studying language and culture. Full-year participants spend spring semester taking regular university courses. Classes are taught in Spanish and second-year language ability is required. Ecuador, Quito. Students interested in improving their Spanish and learning more about the history and culture of Ecuador may participate in a five-week intensive study/travel seminar in Quito during the summer. England, Lancaster. College of Science stu, dents may study for a year at the University of Lancaster in England. JOHN VAN DE WATER Dean 1, y y.,- I International Education England, London. Historic London is the setting for this program, which emphasizes the humanities and social sciences. Field trips are integrated into the academic work to provide a balanced educational experience. Students live with British families. England, Nottingham. Engineering stu- dents (undergraduate and graduate) can spend a year at the University of Nottingham and take courses equivalent to OSU engineering degree requirements while experiencing the British culture and educational system. England, Sussex. Students from the Colleges of Science, Engineering, and Liberal Arts can spend a year at the University of Sussex near Brighton, England. France, Avignon. Students of all majors may study in Avignon fall, winter, or spring term. Students study language and culture and take weekly excursions in the Provence region. A family homestay is part of the program. France, Lyon. Students of all majors may study for a year in Lyon, the second largest city in France. Depending on their language ability, students have the opportunity either to study French language and culture or take courses in virtually every academic area offered by OSU. A minimum of two years of college-level French is required. France, Poitiers. This one-year academic program is for students (of all majors) who have studied at least two years of collegelevel French. Most students are enrolled in the Institute for Foreigners at the University of Poitiers, where they study French language and literature. Students with sufficient academic preparation may enroll in regular University of Poitiers classes. Some students are able to live with French families. Germany, Baden-WHrttemberg. Students in this year-long program may study at any one of the universities in the state of BadenWHrttemberg, including Freiburg, Heidelberg, Hohenheim, Karlsruhe, Konstanz, Mannheim, Stuttgart, THbingen, or Ulm. Instruction is in German; applicants must have had at least two years of college-level German before beginning their studies in Germany. Germany, Cologne. Students of all majors may study Spring term in Cologne. In addition to German language, students take German culture courses taught in English. Students live with German families. — Germany, THbingen. A fifteen-week intensive German language program is available to qualified students who have completed two terms of first-year, college-level German. Students who complete the language intensive program can earn up to 21 credits in German language and culture. Hungary, Szeged. The Hungary program, offered in English, provides insight into another culture and the dramatic changes in the politics of Europe and the world. Language and non-western culture requirements can be fulfilled on this program. There is no language prerequisite, and students of all majors can participate. Italy, Siena. Students of all majors can spend fall, winter, or spring term in Italy taking courses in Italian art, economics, history, and language. Excursions to cities such as Florence, Pisa, and Rome are included. Japan, Tokyo. At Waseda University in Tokyo, students have an opportunity to study the history, culture, and economic conditions of Japan while living with a Japanese family. Instruction is in English. One year of college-level Japanese is required. Japan, Tokyo. Aoyama Gakuin University's School of International Politics, Economics, and Business is the center of this program that integrates American and Japanese students. Instruction is in English. At least one year of college-level Japanese is required. Japan, Tokyo. A term-long program at Asia University in Tokyo allows students to study Japanese language and culture fall or spring term. There is no language prerequisite. = Korea, Seoul. The programs in Korea take advantage of the international divisions of the two universities, Yonsei and Ewha, where students enroll in language courses and study Asian history, economics, and culture in English. There is no language prerequisite. Mexico, Puebla. The pilot program at the University of the Americas offers students the opportunity to take courses in Spanish with Mexican students. Participants reside in dormitories with Mexican roommates. A minimum of two years of college-level Spanish is required. New Zealand, Canterbury. Through the New Zealand exchange program, juniors and seniors in agriculture or forest recreation may study at Lincoln University in Canterbury. Scotland, Aberdeen. Art majors can study art for a year at the Robert Gordon's Institute of Technology in Aberdeen, Scotland. Thailand, Bangkok. The pilot project in Thailand offers a look at the history, culture, and economy of this rapidly developing nation through a one-month program. Students are encouraged to develop research projects to complement the "Thai Perspectives" program. There is no language prerequisite. Ukraine, Kiev. A four-week intensive Russian language program is offered in the summer in Kiev. The program includes language and culture as well as excursions in and around Kiev. M WILLIAM EDWARDS Director, Memorial Union and Educational Activities MIKE HENTHORNE Director of Operations Memorial Union Programs MEMORIAL UNION AND MEMORIAL UNION EAST The Memorial Union, located in the heart of the campus, is the community center of the University. It provides services, facilities, and programs to meet the varied social, recreational, and cultural needs of OSU students, faculty, staff, alumni, and campus guests. The building provides a complete food service including cafeteria, snack bars, and banquet facilities; a bookstore; recreation area including billiards and bowling; a music lounge; music practice rooms; ballroom; post office; art gallery; lounges; and meeting rooms of all types. The Memorial Union East contains an activity center for the use of all student organizations. It provides a communication center for student broadcast and publications media, food-service facilities, meeting rooms, and a craft center. The president of the Memorial Union is a student; other students share actively in its management and in organizing the social, recreational, and cultural programs. The Memorial Union buildings stand as constant reminders of this nation's struggle for peace and as living memorials to Oregon Staters who have given their lives in the service of their country. MU CRAFT CENTER The Memorial Union Craft Center, located on the ground floor of the MU East (is one of only two such centers in Oregon. It is a dynamic, user-supported arts and crafts studio welcoming all adults, encouraging beginners and experienced craftspersons. The Craft Center is open 7 days a week while academic classes are in session and for 8 weeks in the summer. The Center offers open studio workspace, classes, workshops, a Gift Gallery and button service. The facility includes a fully-equipped ceramics studio, black and white photography darkrooms, a woodshop, jewelry lab, stained glass area, mounting and matting area, and lots of room to work. Power and hand tools are available for use in all the craft areas. Other equipment available includes a copy camera, sewing machine, opaque projector, and a craft books library. The Craft Center also operates a promotional button-making business and a Gift Gallery of fine, handcrafted gifts. More than twenty non-credit classes and workshops for the beginner through the advanced student are held each term the craft areas and taught by local artists at the Center. A quarterly catalog of classes and workshops is available throughout the campus or call the Craft Center at 737-2937 and one can be mailed. Open studio memberships are also available for those with experience interested in just using the centers' tools, studio areas, and equipment for projects and exploration. The Craft Center is a hands-on studio with a low key, friendly, and casual environment, a great place to take a creative break and time out from the whirlwind of life. Student Affairs Oregon State University recognizes the value of student activities as a part of a college education. Leadership experience gained through participation in self-governing organizations and programs encourages the development of civic responsibility. Activities enhance social, recreational, and cultural development by fostering par- ticipation in the social, intellectual, and aesthetic life of the campus. STUDENT GOVERNMENT The Associated Students of Oregon State University (ASOSU) is the campus-wide stu- dent government organization. In recent years ASOSU has become increasingly active in the policy making and operation of the University through student participation on some 50 University committees. Councils representing both men's and women's living groups have important roles in student self-government. They include Panhellenic Council, Residence Hall Council, Interfraternity Council, Council of Independent Students, and the Inter-Cooperative Council. STUDENT PROGRAMMING The University experience includes many extracurricular activities. Located in the Memorial Union Program Office, the Memorial Union Program Council strives to achieve many of these opportunities by presenting social, cultural, and recreational programs for students, faculty, staff, alumni, and guests of the University. The Program Council provides a broad range of programs intended to enhance the quality of life in the university community. This is achieved through many traditional events such as "Mom's Weekend," "Dad's Weekend," "Homecoming," concerts, and movies. In addition, the Program Council offers many programs relating to current events and programs designed to query individuals beliefs in cultural backgrounds and philosophical views. ART AND MUSIC Exhibits, lectures, concerts, and recitals sponsored by the departments of Art and Music, Encore, Memorial Union Program Council, and student musical and art organizations play a central part in the cultural life of the community. Under the patronage of the Memorial Union Program Council, exhibitions in the Memorial Union stimulate interest in architecture, painting, sculpture, and related arts. They offer students knowledge of their cultural heritage and an awareness of contemporary art movements. Student and faculty art exhibits are shown in various galleries throughout the year (see "Library, Museums, Galleries, and Collections"). Membership in the student musical organizations is open to all students after consultation with the directors concerned. OSU groups are members of the.American Symphony Orchestra League and the American Choral Foundation. Students in these activities earn regular credit. The Corvallis-OSU Symphony, University band organizations, the University Choir, Madrigal Singers, and the Choralaires present several concerts annually on the campus. The Corvallis and OSU Music Association and the Friends of Chamber Music bring artists of international fame to the campus for concerts and recitals. Advanced music 57 students and faculty also give public recitals during the year. Several dance recitals are given each year under the auspices of the College Health and Human Performance and other organizations. JOANNE TROW FORENSICS AND DRAMA Director Student Activities Speech activities have intellectual and cultural value for both the participants and the campus community. Oregon State University is a member of the Northwest Forensic Conference, American Forensic Association, Cross-Examination Debate Association, the Intercollegiate Oratory Association of Oregon, and Model United Nations. Special student organizations, such as Masque and Dagger and chapters of Delta Sigma Rho-Tau Kappa Alpha, Zeta Phi Eta, and National Collegiate Players also provide outlets for forensic and dramatic talent. A full schedule of forensic activities for both men and women students, including debate, oratory, extemporaneous speaking, after-dinner speaking, and literature interpretation events, are under the direction of the Department of Speech Communication. Each year, students compete in state intercollegiate speaking contests and regional and national forensic tournaments. Many other students are given an opportunity to speak or read before service clubs, lodges, granges, and related groups. For participation in these activities, a student may earn regular credit. Training and experience in acting, play production, and stagecraft are provided by the Department of Speech Communication. Each season, seven major plays and groups of one-act plays are presented in Mitchell Playhouse in connection with course work. STUDENT MEDIA The Daily Barometer Oregon State University's student newspaper is distributed throughout the campus and community each weekday.during the school year and once a week in the summer. Its student editors determine news and editorial content and direct the staff in reporting, writing, and editing assignments. Offices are located on the first floor of MU East (Snell Hall). Beaver Yearbook The yearbook reviews the people and events which make the academic year memorable. It is under the direction of student editors who determine its policy and content. The yearbook may be ordered for $20.00 when paying fees during registration and is available for pickup at the Student Activities Center in the fall. They must be picked up within 90 days from the time distribution begins.Yearbook fees are refundable in full during the first two weeks of the semester in which payment is made. Thereafter, no refunds will be made on cancelled orders. Students who will not be on campus when the yearbooks are distributed may pay a mailing and handling fee at the Student Activities Center. Vice Provost for Student Affairs DONALD R. SANDERSON FRANK RAGULSKY Director Student Media THOMAS KIRSCH Director Recreational Sports YVONNE SEBASTIAN Activities Coordinator 58 Student Affairs KVBR FM Radio Oregon State University's on-campus radio station gives students an opportunity to gain experience in live radio broadcasting. Featuring high quality public affairs programming and alternative music, the station can be found on the dial at 88.7 FM. Offices are located on the second floor of MU East (Snell Hall) (503) 737-6323. KBVR TV A fully equipped television studio, editing facility and remote gear afford practical training in television production. Programming includes a wide variety of locally produced shows plus the nightly news, live music programs, live coverage of OSU sporting events, game shows, comedy, movies, public affairs interviews and documentaries. KVBR TV can be seen on cable channel 11 in Corvallis, Albany and Philomath 4 nights a week from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. Offices are located on the second floor of MU East (Snell Hall) (503) 737-6323. Prism The Prism literary magazine is published once yearly by volunteer students at Oregon State University. Prism welcomes contributions from the OSU community in the form of photography, art, poetry, short stories and music. Magazines are distributed during Spring term and will be announced in The Daily Barometer. Contact the Student Media Office for more information. LECTURES Frequent public lectures by faculty members, visiting scholars, and persons prominent in national affairs supplement the regular curriculum. Campus sponsors of lectures include the Committee on Convocations and Lectures, Y-Round Table, Associated Students, Memorial Union Program Council, Sigma Xi, and others. THE EXPERIMENTAL COLLEGE Established in 1968, the Experimental College offers a wide range of courses to anyone in the community interested in an alternative learning experience-students, faculty, staff, and Corvallis and area residents. Volunteers teach the courses, after submitting course proposals by the middle of the term prior to teaching. Each term, more than 30 courses are listed in the catalog, and more than 2,000 people enroll. Class content, which is limited only by the imaginations and interests of the participants, includes aerobics, beer making, cooking, crafts, massage and yoga, and recreation courses. Classes are noncredit and nongraded. A $2 registration fee helps pay registration costs and material fees cover direct materials used (teachers are not paid). Participants are also encouraged to attend films, guest lectures, and special programs sponsored by the Experimental College. Northwest Excursions, patterned after the Trips and Tours programs, is run through the Experimental College and offers lowcost educational trips to participants. For more information about this studentadministered program, contact the director of the Experimental College at 737-4683. The Experimental College offers job opportunities to students interested in public relations, accounting, scheduling, and management. Volunteers move up into paid positions. ETHNIC CULTURAL CENTERS Oregon State University operates four ethnic cultural centers: the Asian Cultural Center, the Black Cultural Center, the Hispanic Cultural Center, and the Native American Longhouse. The centers offer various academic, cultural, recreational, and social events. Each center is located in a separate facility; and all are open to the public. The cultural centers bring together minority students and faculty with different interests and provide an opportunity for interaction of people from the University and local communities. The programs each center offers promote a greater awareness and understanding of lifestyles, problems, history, and cultural contributions of ethnic Recreational sports program opportunities at Oregon State University include: Informal recreation:Dixon Recreation Center self-directed, as well as organized activities for all students, faculty, staff, and spouses in aerobic fitness, conditioning, pickleball, wallyball, basketball, racquetball, volleyball, squash, weight training, tennis, handball, table tennis, general exercise, and badminton. The Stevens Natatorium includes an 8lane, 25-yard fitness pool, a deep water pool and a spa with adjoining sun deck. Full-service locker rooms, equipment issue area, and a first aid lounge are also available. This facility will accommodate the recreational swim program as well as a Master's Swim Program and water conditioning and fitness offers classes. Sport clubs: Intercollegiate competition for students in cycling, equestrian events, fencing, lacrosse, rifle, pistol, rodeo, rugby, sailing, skiing, squash, tennis, triathlon, ultimate disc, volleyball, and water polo. Outdoor recreation: An outdoor resource library; map file; equipment rental service; noncredit instruction in such activities as mountain and rock climbing, cross country skiing, bicycle maintenance, white water rafting, kayaking, and backpacking; and groups. trip-planning assistance for backpacking, OSU's cultural centers are part of the camping, rock climbing, canoeing, rafting, Memorial Union Activities Program. The kayaking, and skiing. centers are governed by separate advisory The Indoor Climbing Center provides boards composed of students, faculty, and 4,000 square feet of climbing surface for administrators. climbers of all abilities. State-of-the-art feaATHLETICS tures include a stemming corner and a Oregon State University conducts athletic chimney climb, overhangs, pockets, a lead programs under the auspices of the NCAA arch, a crack wall, and a climbing route for both men and women. Men's programs which leads across the ceiling. Other feacompete as a member of the Pacific-10 Con- tures are hangboards, a low-angling wall for ference in football, baseball, basketball, beginners, a rappeling station, and an "international bouldering wall", and facility wrestling, crew, soccer, and golf. The women's programs also compete in the rental. Pacific-10 Conference and include volleyFitness Programs: Noncredit instructional ball, basketball, gymnastics, swimming and fitness and sport skills classes in activities diving, softball, crew, soccer, and golf. such as aerobic dance, step aerobics, conditioning, weight training, aqua aerobics, RECREATIONAL SPORTS fencing, and martial arts. Student-fee-funded recreational sports proIndividual fitness incentive programs grams and facilities at Oregon State Universuch as "A Point To Be Fit," one-on-one fitsity are coordinated and administered by ness assessments, and special events round the Board of Recreational Sports. out the fitness program offerings. The Department of Recreational Sports The Intramural Sports: Department offers and the College of Health and Human Perover 30 individual, dual, and team sports formance administer the following facilities including flag football, volleyball, swimavailable for recreational sports activities: ming, water polo, basketball, softball, soccer, Recreational sports facilities: Dixon Recretrack, golf, triathlon, 5K runs, bike races, ation Center, Stevens Natatorium, Outdoor bowling, skeet, billiards, tennis, racquetball, Recreation Center, McAlexander Fieldhouse, badminton, wrestling, free throw contest, Parker Stadium Indoor Climbing Center, three point shoot-out, and others. Peavy Sports Fields, and University Tennis Memorial Union Recreation Center: Bowling, Courts and Tennis Pavilion. billiards, and electronic games. The RecreCollege of Health and Human Performance ation Center offers organized leagues, tourfacilities: Langton Hall, Women's Gym, naments, and clinics, as well as open intramural track, intramural playing fields, recreation and facility rental. and golf practice areas. Library, Museums, Galleries, Collections The University's instructional and research programs are supported by libraries which offer the most modem electronic services, as well as many unique collections, galleries and museums which enhance and support the learning process. OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES The William Jasper Kerr Library is a six- story building containing more than 1,200,000 volumes, 330,000 government documents, and 1,500,000 microform pieces. Most materials are on open shelves directly available to faculty and students. Located on the first floor are newspapers, microforms and microform readers, the documents division, the Map Room, and the UCS student computer labs. The library offers a full range of reference and information services. Librarians are available at the general reference and information desk on the second floor to help library users to locate information on all subjects. Students, faculty and staff are encouraged to make appointments ahead of time, through the reference/ information desk, for help with extensive research projects. Separate service units are available on the first floor for the government documents, maps, and microform collections. In addition, members of the library faculty are available to work with other faculty in preparing course related instructional programs, for guidance and help in searching automated databases, to arrange interlibrary loans, and to provide services for regional businesses and county extension and research stations across the state. The OSU libraries are fully automated. The library online catalog, known as OASIS, is available through public terminals on each floor of the library and to students and faculty in their offices and laboratories through the campus electronic network. Others can use modem dialup access through the campus LAN. Non-print holdings are being added to OASIS in cooperation with the Communication Media Center. In addition to OASIS, the library makes more than thirty CD-ROM databases available for searching in the library only. The library continues to mediate searches through off-campus databases through its Library Information Retrieval Service (LIRS). Inquiries about automated access to the library should be addressed to the library automation staff or to anyone at the reference/information desk. Collections. All book collections are under the direction of subject specialists who closely coordinate their efforts with teaching and research needs of the,University. Subjects in which special strength has been developed are textiles, nutrition, mathematics, horticulture, oceanography, agriculture, forestry, entomology, and marine biology. Collections of some distinction are being developed in food technology, chemistry, plant pathology, and mycology. Almost 18,000 serials are currently received, of which 7,000 are periodicals. Bound serials are a major portion of the library's holdings. The library, with over 170,000 maps, has one of the more comprehensive map collections in the Northwest. Special Collections contains the papers of Linus Pauling, internationally acclaimed scientist and the only person to have won two unshared Nobel prizes. The collection includes all of Pauling's personal and scientific papers, notebooks, and correspondence from 1916 to the present: more than 125,000 items comprising some 130 linear feet. There are also books, medals, research models, memorabilia, and more than 100 films. These papers reflect the variety and breadth of Linus Pauling's scholarly interest and his pro- found influence on the development of 20th-century chemistry and biology. Also in Special Collections is the Atomic Energy Collection, one of the more important research collections on the subject in the United States. The collection consists of nearly 3,000 items, including the first published account of the discovery of radioactivity in 1896 by Henri Becquerel, the hearings of Robert Oppenheimer, and formerly secret reports. It also features cultural aspects of the atomic age. Kerr Library is a U.S. Government depository library as well as a depository for official publications of the state of Oregon. Publications from industrial, business, and international organizations and institutions are also received. The Mark O. Hatfield Marine Science Center houses the Marilyn Potts Guin Library. Material in that library is included in OASIS and is available to library users. Borrowing privileges are extended to the university community and to others by permission. Through a reciprocal agreement, state system libraries honor each other's student and faculty identification cards for circulating materials. Over 5,000,000 volumes in the libraries of the state institutions of higher education are available to faculty, staff members, and students through interlibrary loan. In addition, books are borrowed from and lent to other libraries in the Pacific Northwest and throughout the nation and world. Membership in the Center for Research Libraries provides access to expensive and rare research materials. MELVIN R. GEORGE Donald and Delpha Campbell Director of Libraries M% Library, Museums, Galleries, Collections MUSEUMS, GALLERIES, AND COLLECTIONS The educational resources of the University include museums, galleries, collections, and exhibits of cultural and scientific materials. Research, teaching, and extension functions are combined in these collections, which serve both the institution and the general public. Over the years, various departments of the University have become repositories for extensive holdings of manuscripts; rare books; prints, paintings, and other art objects; costumes; textiles; historic artifacts; archaeological material; fossils; preserved plants and animals; wood products; and marine material. These collections serve many of the same functions as a library or make possible the identification of materials whose age, name, or significance is unknown. The Horner Museum, the Natural History Museum, and the Mark 0. Hatfield Marine Science Center at Newport aim to acquaint the public with our cultural heritage, histoThe Department of Apparel, Interiors, Housry, fauna, flora, and the distinctive features ing and Merchandising (E. Pedersen, Collecof Oregon. Most other collections serve prition Manager) houses a collection of more marily research and teaching functions and than 1,000 historic and ethnic textiles and may be viewed by prior appointment with costumes. Among the earliest textiles in the their curators. Permanent collections and collection are those from Coptic Egypt and museums include: Pre-Columbian Peru. A collection of more (L. Skjelstad, Director) The Homer Museum than 300 historic American and European serves OSU students and faculty and the costumes dates from 1805 to the present. public with educational and research opporLocation: Milam Hall. tunities. It collects and exhibits materials The Archaeological Collection (D. R. pertaining to the natural and human history Brauner, R. E. Ross, Curators) consists of of Oregon and of other cultures. It is the key material specimens, artifacts, field notes, facility for the graduate Master of Interdiscidrawings, sketches, and photographs accuplinary Studies (M.A.I.S.) program with a mulated in archaeological investigations. museum studies concentration. The museSeveral thousand items of primary archaeoum is located in Gill Coliseum. logical documentation comprise this collecThe University Archives (Michael Holland, tion. Location: Waldo Hall. Archivist) is the official repository for UniThe Neumann Collection (R. L. Hall, Curaversity records. Holdings include departtor), a gift from Holm W. Neumann, Ph.D., mental records; University publications; M.D., includes several hundred human more than 140,000 photographs; the perbones and fossil casts, anthropometric sonal papers of OSU faculty, alumni, and equipment, and approximately 5,000 volaffiliated organizations; and a large collecumes on anthropological history, theory, tion of memorabilia including programs, and methodology. Location: Waldo Hall. posters, brochures, and clippings. Location: The Archive for the History of Science and Administrative Services Building. Technology (P. L. Farber, Curator) is part of The Natural History Collection (R. M. the research resources in the history of sciStorm, Curator) includes 550 mounts of birds and mammals in the J. C. Braly Collec- ence program. The collection consists of manuscripts, books, notebooks, and corretion. A collection of specimen skins on the spondence of researchers in science, agriculfifth floor is used mainly for teaching. Locature, forestry, and engineering. The tion: Cordley Hall II. collection particularly emphasizes docuThe Public Wing of the OSU Marine Science ments concerning these fields in the Pacific Center at Newport includes 20 aquariums Northwest. Location: Special Collections, which accommodate about 50 species of Kerr Library. marine fishes and 60 identified species of The Systematic Entomology Laboratory U. D. invertebrates. Displays present a spectrum of Lattin, Curator) contains approximately marine subjects, including the earth's crust, 2,600,000 insects and mites, chiefly from coastal geology, tides, oceanic circulation, the Pacific Northwest. The collection is estuaries, archeology, marine mammals, and especially strong in Hymenoptera, the marine resources of Oregon. Coleoptera, Lepidoptera, Homoptera, Diptera, and Hemiptera. Of special interest are the collections of beetles of the Pacific Northwest, sphecoid wasps of the world, bees, butterflies and skippers, mites associated with scarabs, marine mites, leaf hoppers, plant bugs, litter arthropods, forest insects, and aquatic insects. Location: Cordley Hall. The Fisheries and Wildlife Bird and Mammal Collections U. A. Crawford, Curator of Birds; B. E. Coblentz, Curator of Mammals) include more than 9,000 specimens of birds and 7,500 specimens of mammals, as well as the Braly Ornithological Collection; Overton Dowell, Jr., Bird Collection and field notes; Alex Walker Ornithological Collection and Library; Oregon Game Commission Collection; and Grace McCormac French ornithological notes and literature. Location: Nash Hall. The Forest Products Collection (B.L. Gartner, Curatcr) contains approximately 2,500 species of wood, primarily from North and South America, Southeast Asia, and Africa. The Department of Art Slide Collection U. Northam, Curator) contains 65,000 slides of paintings, sculpture, architecture, crafts, graphic design, and general design from prehistoric times to the present. The collection is primarily for use by faculty in their classes. Location: Fairbanks Hall. The Fine Arts Collection (D. Russell, Cura- tor), consists of medieval illuminated manuscript pages, older European and Japanese prints, 20th-century paintings, prints, mosaics; sculpture, and crafts. Selection from the collection are exhibited occasionally in the Fairbanks and Giustina Galleries. The Geological Collections (C. W. Field, Director) include minerals, rocks, and fossils. The W. D. Wilkinson and Walter Lidstrom Memorial Mineral collections (E. M. Taylor, Curator) contain several hundred Libraries, Museums, Galleries, Collections rare and fine specimens. Over 5,000 fossil specimens of Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Cenozoic marine invertebrates comprise the outstanding John H. Howard and Earl L. Packard collections in Paleontology (E.J. Moore, Curator). The Silurian Devonian Bra- chiopod Collection (A. J. Boucot, Curator), consisting of about one million specimens, is the most comprehensive of this type in the world with representation in some depth from every region in the world. This collection is the property of the U.S. Museum of Natural History, Washington, D.C. Location: Wilkinson Hall. The Herbarium (A. I. Liston, Director) contains over 250,000 named specimens of seed plants, ferns, mosses, algae, and fungi. Emphasis is on collections from western North America. The herbarium is the repository for the Morton E. Peck Herbarium of Willamette University, a research collection of Oregon flora consisting of more than 30,000 sheets. The mycological collections (W.C. Denison, Curator), consist of approximately 50,000 dried specimens of fungi and lichens, supplemented by microscope slides and a culture collection. These collections include the H. C. Gilbert Myxomycete Collection and the Forest Service Pathology Herbarium. Location: Cordley Hall. The Ichthyological and Herpetological Collection (D. Markle and R. M. Storm, Curators) contains more than 12,000 cataloged lots of fish representing 180,000 specimens and 45 nominal type specimens. In addition, there are about 260,000 uncataloged specimens available for study. The collection emphasizes fishes of the Pacific Northwest, but specimens from many parts of the world are held. The herpetological section contains more than 10,000 specimens, mostly from western North America. Use of the collection is restricted to qualified students and investigators. Location: Nash Hall. The McDonald Collection (Clifford S. Mead, Head of Special Collections) consists of rare books. Fine examples of typography, works of famous illustrators, numerous fine bindings, and several first editions are represented in the collection. Location: Kerr Library. The Memorial Union Gallery (W. C. Edwards, Director) includes collections of landscapes and marine paintings by the late William Henry Price and Leo Fairbanks. A permanent collection displays American .y f 11 11 I I 1: r C, a. . 61 Indian portraits by Carrie M. Gilbert and prints by Gordon Gilkey. Throughout the year numerous temporary exhibits of cultural and social interest are displayed in the main concourse of the Union. Fairbanks Art Gallery (D. Russell, Director) exhibits monthly shows of contemporary art by local, regional, and national artists. On occasion, the gallery's exhibits are drawn from the Department of Art's collection. Location: Fairbanks Hall. The History of Atomic Energy Collection (C. Mead, Head of Special Collections) consists of nearly 3,000 items, including the first published account of the discovery of radioactivity in 1896, writings on the Manhattan project, the hearings of Robert Oppenheimer, and formerly secret report of the effects of the atom bomb. It also features cultural aspects of the atomic age. Giustina Gallery (D. Russell, Director) features art by outstanding regional and national artists. Exhibits are rotated approxi- mately every six weeks with a show by senior art majors featured every spring. There also is a permanent exhibit of "Art about Agriculture" hanging in the conference wing. Location: LaSells Stewart Center. If 62 Alumni and University Relations ALUMNI ASSOCIATION The purpose of the alumni association is to promote the interests and ideals of Oregon Kathy Kjome Baines '62, Lake Oswego Gretchen Schuette '80, Salem Kay Kirkey Warner '59, Eugene State University. Annual and life memberships are available to all graduates, former students and friends of Oregon State. The association publishes the Oregon Stater newspaper for all alumni, organizes alumni gatherings and class reunions, and maintains current address records of its members. The alumni association is governed by a board of directors of 62 members representing various geographical districts, all degreegranting colleges, the Golden Jubilee Association, and the student body. Officers and directors are elected annually at the spring term board meeting. Directors may serve two three-year terms. Executive Committee (effective July 1992) Peggy Colton Wood'61, Immediate Past President, Portland Robert E. Moore '72 President, Portland Lee A. Souder '74, First Vice President, La Canada, CA Paul L. Miller '76, Treasurer, Corvallis Michael G. Cowgill ' 75, (Second Vice President), Albany Thomas L. Nelson '75, Roseburg Jess A. Rogerson '59, Lake Oswego Robert Gl. Allen '70, Hillsboro Staff Donald S. Wirth'61, Corvallis, Director of Alumni Relations Kevin L. McCann '76, Corvallis, Associate Director of Alumni Relations Carrie Z. Kinnear, Development Officer, Alumni Relations Natalie S. Barnes '81, Alumni Advocate/ Program Leader, Alumni Relations OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY FOUNDATION AND UNIVERSITY DEVELOPMENT OFFICE The Oregon State University Foundation and the OSU Office of Development work together to aid and promote Oregon State's teaching, research, and service activities. The OSU Foundation, incorporated as a nonprofit corporation on October 15, 1947, fills the need for a legally sound, inclusive, charitable agency apart from, but working in close coordination with, the University. The Foundation receives gifts of cash, securities, and real and personal property, as well as deferred gifts such as bequests, life insurance, and life income agreements, to support the University's many programs. The Office of Development builds relationships with individuals, corporations, and foundations, to encourage them to support the University with contributions of both time and financial resources. It includes fund raisers housed in the colleges and in units such as the library. The staff works with the campus community to maximize private financial support through the Foundation to benefit the University. OSU Foundation Executive Committee, 1992-93 Norbert J. Wellman, Chairman of the Board Kenneth R. Poorman, President Tom Hartung, Vice President John V. Byrne, Secretary Martin N. Kelley, Treasurer Joan Austin Henry L. Bauer Kathy Ellis N.B. Guistina Gerald R. Hulsman John Irving C. W. Knodell Robert W. Lundeen Clayton Nyberg Sally Plumley Forrest W. Simmons Ronald J. Theberge Margaret Walton Benjamin Whiteley Don Wrenn Alumni and University Relations OSU Foundation Staff John W. Irving, Executive Director Ronald J. Theberge, Chief Financial Officer Lori Ask, Property Administrator Development Staff John M. Evey, Director of Development Maya Abels, Director, Corporate & Foundation Relations Beverley C. Beckley, Director, Donor Relations Betty Brose, Director of Development, College of Agricultural Sciences Molly Brown, Assistant Director of Corporate and Foundation Relations Judy Carison, Director of Development, Thundering Seas Foundation Tom Chandler, Director of Development, OSU Hatfield Marine Science Center Cliff Dalton, Director of Development, College of Business Gilda N. Geier, Director, Development Research & Planning Jeff Hale, Director of Development, College of Liberal Arts Penny M. Hardesty, Director, Development Communications Erin J. Haynes, Director, Annual Giving Patrick Hundley, Director of Development, Colleges of Pharmacy & Health and Human Performance Jim Kennison, Director, College and Unit Development, & Director, Library Expansion Project Carne Kinnear, Director of Development, Alumni Office Melanie Marshall, Telefund Coordinator June Martin, Director of Development, College of Science Lisa Mattes, Director of Development, College of Forestry Hal Pritchett, Development Officer, Construction Education Programs Marilyn Sarff, University Events Coordinator Joseph W. Skehen, Director Charitable Estate Planning Scott Spiegelberg, Associate Director for External Affairs, Intercollegiate Athletics J. Janice Welle, Chief Administrative Officer Donna Vuchinich Director of Development, College of Home Economics 63 4 .r, 1 If 1.6 DEPARTMENT OF NEWS AND COMMUNICATION SERVICES COMMUNITY AND GOVERNMENT RELATIONS ROBERT BRUCE KEVIN MCCANN Director Director All University news moves to off-campus media through the Department of News and Communication Services, which maintains close ties with the newspapers, wire services, radio and television stations, and professional publications of the state, region, and nation. The department also produces OSU This Week, the staff newsletter, published weekly during the school UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS Statewide and local community information and assistance, as well as local and state government relationships are coordinated through this office in University Relations. Legislative information and service are provided to the University, including assistance in making presentations to legislators and legislative committees.Community and government relations work is done cooperatively with the public affairs office of the Oregon State System of Higher Education and with other Oregon colleges and univer- JEFFREY B. GRASS sities. year. Director The Office of University Publications writes, edits, and designs the official publications of Oregon State University, including catalogs, books, posters, brochures, and programs. The office also coordinates production with the OSU Department of Printing and Mailing Services. OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS JEFFREY B. GRASS Director The Oregon State University Press-one of only four university presses in the Pacific Northwest-is a publisher of scholarly books. The Press, founded in 1961, publishes books in the areas of natural resource management, history, and literature, with a special emphasis on books of particular importance to Oregon and the Pacific Northwest. UNIVERSITY MARKETING CONFERENCES AND SPECIAL EVENTS SYLVIA L. MOORE Director The Office of University Marketing, Conferences and Special Events administers the LaSells Stewart Center for Conferences and Performing Arts as well as the OSU Portland Center. It coordinates meetings and conferences both on and off campus for OSU faculty and staff as well as for non-profit and private sector groups. It also is responsible for scheduling of University facilities for non-academic use and the maintenance of the University master calendar. Graduate School IL 289 Exciting and diverse educational opportunities are offered through the graduate programs of Oregon State University's 11 colleges which encompass over 70 major disciplines. A Land, Sea, and Space Grant University, OSU enrolls almost 3,000 graduate students, representing more than 90 countries and every state in the nation. t OSU, maximum opportunity is provided for the integration of graduate instruction and research. The graduate faculty (1,600 members) is selected on the basis of training, experience, research, and evidence of the ability to successfully direct and supervise graduate students. All study beyond the bachelor's degree at Oregon State University is conducted through the Graduate School. The establishment of departmental graduate programs General Science-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Genetics-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Geography-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Geology-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Geophysics-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Health-M.S., Ph.D. Health and Safety Administration-M.S. Health Education-M.S. Home Economics-M.S. Horticulture-M.S., Ph.D. Human Development and Family StudiesM.S., Ph.D. Human Performance-M.S., Ph.D. Industrial Engineering-M.S., Ph.D. Interdisciplinary Studies-M.A.I.S. of the departments, under the general rules Marine Resource Management-M.A., M.S. and requirements of the Graduate School. Materials Science-M.S. The information presented in this catalog Mathematics-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. concerning graduate programs, degree Mathematics Education-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. requirements, Graduate School rules and Mechanical Engineering-M.S., Ph.D. regulations, and specific department Microbiology-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. requirements has been condensed. ComMolecular and Cellular Biology-Ph.D. plete information is available in the OSU Graduate Catalog which is available free from Movement Studies for the Disabled-M.S. the Graduate School. Nuclear Engineering-M.S., Ph.D. Nutrition and Food Management-M.S., ADVANCED DEGREES Ph.D. The major academic fields in which Ocean Engineering-M.Oc.E. advanced degrees are offered by Oregon Oceanography-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. State University and the types of degrees Operations Research-M.A., M.S. granted in these fields are listed below. Pharmacy-M.S., Ph.D. Physics-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Adult Education-Ed.M. Agricultural and Resource Economics-M.S., Plant Physiology-M.S., Ph.D. Poultry Science-M.S., Ph.D. Ph.D. Radiation Health-M.A., M.S. Agricultural Education-M.S. Rangeland Resources-M.S., Ph.D. Agriculture-M.Agr. Science Education-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Animal Science-M.S., Ph.D. Scientific and Technical CommunicationApparel, Interiors, and Merchandisingand the formulation and direction of individual student programs are responsibilities M.A., M.S. Applied Anthropology-M.A. Atmospheric Sciences-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Biochemistry/Biophysics-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Bioresource Engineering-M.S., Ph.D. Botany and Plant Pathology-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Business Administration-M.B.A. Chemical Engineering-M.S., Ph.D. Chemistry-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Civil Engineering-M.S., Ph.D. College Student Services AdministrationEd.M., M.S. Comparative Veterinary Medicine-Ph.D. Computer Science-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Counseling-M.S., Ph.D. Crop Science-M.S., Ph.D. Economics-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Education-Ed.M., M.S., Ed.D., Ph.D. Electrical and Computer Engineering-M.S., Ph.D. Entomology-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Environmental Health Management-M.S. Family Resource Management-M.S., Ph.D. Fisheries Science-M.S., Ph.D. Food Science and Technology-M.S., Ph.D. Forest Engineering-M.F., M.S., Ph.D. Forest Products-M.F., M.S., Ph.D. Forest Resources-M.F., M.S., Ph.D. Forest Science-M.F., M.S., Ph.D. M.A., M.S. Soil Science-M.S., Ph.D. Statistics-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Teaching-M.A.T. Toxicology-M.S., Ph.D. Veterinary Science-M.S. Wildlife Science-M.S., Ph.D. Zoology-M.A., M.S., Ph.D. MINORS Any of the majors listed above may also be taken as minor fields of study as part of a student's graduate study program. In addition, the following graduate minors are offered: Agricultural Chemistry Anthropology Art Community College Education Community Health Economic Geography English Extension Methods Foreign Languages and Literatures Gerontology History International Agricultural Development Museum Studies Music Philosophy Physical Education AdS A 300 Oregon State University Corvallis, OR 97331-2121 (503) 737-4881 ADMINISTRATION THOMAS J. MARESH Dean JOHN C. RINGLE Associate Dean MARLIENE A. COSTA Director of Minority Affairs and Special Programs 290 Graduate School Political Science Psychology Sociology Speech Communication Water Resources Women Studies GENERAL REGULATIONS ADMISSION A student desiring to enter the Graduate School at Oregon State University will provide the Office of Admissions: (a) admission forms; (b) official, sealed transcripts of all previous college or university work; (c) a letter indicating the student's objectives and the special fields of interest, and (d) a nonrefundable $40 application fee. A third copy of the application form must be sent directly to the major department, along with copies of transcripts, a copy of the letter of interest, and three letters of reference. The applicant should contact the major department for any special requirements such as GRE scores. To be considered for admission to the Graduate School, an applicant must have a 4-year baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university, as well as a scholastic record, background, and other evidence that indicate the ability to do satisfactory graduate work. Normally, this is a combined GPA of 3.00 on the last 90 credits of graded undergraduate work plus all work completed thereafter. The Office of Admissions will determine whether the general conditions for admission have been met. The major department indicated by the student will examine the material submitted to determine adequacy of scholastic background and to decide whether departmental facilities are adequate for the student's expressed aims. Test of English Proficiency The Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) is required of all international applicants whose native language is not English. The minimum acceptable TOEFL score is 550. If all other admission requirements are met, provisional admission may be granted if an applicant has a TOEFL score of at least 500. Refer to International Student Admissions in the Graduate Catalog for complete details. ADMISSION STATUS Students may be admitted to the Graduate School under the following categories: Advanced Degree Students (Regular Graduate Students) These students have been accepted by the University and by a major department to work toward an advanced degree. Provisionally Admitted Graduate Students Students who have not met the formal admission requirements but whose accomplishments have convinced the University's graduate admissions committee and their major departments that they have potential for success as advanced degree candidates may be admitted provisionally. Credit will be allowed for graduate courses students have completed acceptably while registered as provisional students. If they fail to complete satisfactorily these conditions, they will be dismissed from the Graduate School. Non-degree Students The non-degree student category may be used by those holding a baccalaureate degree who do not wish to pursue an advanced degree. Reclassification of Postbaccalaureate and Non-degree Students A postbaccalaureate or non-degree student (graduate) may be considered for status as a regular graduate student under one of the following provisions, depending upon prior academic records: a. If the student would have been eligible for graduate admission at the time of entering as a postbaccalaureate or a non-degree student, he or she is eligible for admission consideration at any time. b. If the student, prior to entering as a postbaccalaureate or non-degree student, had been denied graduate admission, or would have been ineligible for graduate admission as determined a posteriori by the Graduate Admissions committee, the postbaccalaureate or non-degree student must complete 24 credits each with a grade of B (3.00) or better or bring the cumulative grade point average (that for the last 90 credits of undergraduate work plus that for courses taken as part of the 24-hour rule) to 3.00 or better before the student is eligible to apply for graduate admission. These courses will normally be regular graduate courses relevant to the specific field, except that seminars and other blanket number graduate courses may not be used. Upper division undergraduate courses are acceptable, provided that they eliminate specific deficiencies. Lower division undergraduate courses may not be used. All courses should be carefully selected in consultation with an academic adviser from the graduate field into which the student desires admission. The completion of 24 credits with a grade of B (3.00) or better in each course does not guarantee graduate admission. Reclassification decisions employ the same procedures and requirements as those for admission. All requests for reclassification are initiated in the Graduate School. DISMISSAL FROM GRADUATE SCHOOL Advanced degree (including provisional) students are expected to make satisfactory progress toward a specific academic objective including maintaining a satisfactory GPA (3.00 or greater), meeting departmental requirements, and participating in a creative activity such as a thesis. If the major department requests that the student be terminated from its program, he or she may be dismissed from the Graduate School. Any student who fails a final oral examination may be dismissed from the Graduate School. Academic dishonesty and other violations of the Student Conduct Regulations may serve as grounds for dismissal from the Graduate School. GRIEVANCE PROCEDURES Students desiring to appeal matters relating to their graduate education should request a copy of Grievance Procedures for Graduate Students at Oregon State University from the Graduate School. REENROLLMENT Graduate students who withdraw from the Graduate School must apply for readmission to reenter in a subsequent term. Readmittance back into a graduate program is not guaranteed. REQUIREMENTS AND OPTIONS Reserving Credits Credit for graduate courses taken in excess of the requirements for a baccalaureate degree may be granted to undergraduate and postbaccalaureate students by reserving credits for possible use in a graduate program. A maximum of 15 credits may be reserved for graduate credit. Baccalaureate degree holders who are admitted to postbaccalaureate status may reserve not more than 6 graduate credits per term to apply in a graduate program. A request for reservation of credit must be made prior to the end of the term in which the student completes baccalaureate requirements. Term Credit Load The maximum load for a full-time graduate student is 16 credits. A student may exceed this limit only with the approval of the Graduate School. For teaching and research assistants, the maximum load is 15 credits if appointed on a .15 to .29 FTE assistantship and 12 credits if the appointment is .30 to .50 FTE. The minimum load is 9 term credits; fellows may carry the maximum load. A minimum load of 9 term credits may be necessary to qualify for purposes of veterans' benefits, visa requirements, financial aid, etc. A degree-seeking student must enroll for a minimum of 3 credits in any quarter. Registration solely for the purpose of taking the final oral exam for the master's or doctoral degree is not required. Grade Requirement A grade-point average of 3.00 (a B average) is required for all courses taken as a graduate student and for courses included in the graduate program. Grades below C (2.00) are not accepted on a graduate program. Graduate students may elect to take courses on the S-U basis only if those courses are not in their degree program or are not required for the removal of deficiencies. Graduate Major A graduate major is the area of academic specialization, approved by the State Board of Higher Education, in which the student chooses to qualify for the award of a graduate degree. Upon completion of a graduate degree, the degree awarded and the graduate major are listed on the student's transcript. Graduate School I I Graduate Minor A graduate minor is an academic area that clearly supports the major. On a master's or doctoral program, a minor may be (a) an academic area available only as a minor, (b) a different major, (c) the same major with a different area of concentration (d) an approved major at another institution in the Full-time staff members normally may not register for more than 6 credits per term at staff fee rates. Further information may be obtained from the Department of Human Resources. GRADUATE APPOINTMENTS Graduate Teaching Assistantships and Gradu- 291 Language Requirements For the Master of Arts degree, the student must show proficiency in a foreign language as certified by the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, equivalent to the level attained by the end of the second-year university course in the language with a grade of C (2.00) or better. There is no foreign language requirement for the Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies degree. For all other master's degrees there is no foreign language requirement, unless a language is needed in the individual student's program. ate Research Assistantships are awarded by Oregon State System of Higher Education, or academic departments to graduate students (e) an integrated minor. An integrated minor who have superior records in their underconsists of a series of cognate courses from graduate work. In order to hold an assistanttwo or more areas outside the major and the ship appointment, the person must be major area of concentration. admitted as a regular, advanced degree gradGraduate Study Program Graduate Areas of Concentration uate student, be enrolled as a full-time stuA regular master's degree student must file a A graduate area of concentration is a subdident in the Graduate School concurrently study program with the Graduate School vision of a major or minor in which a strong with the assistantship appointment, and be graduate program is available. making satisfactory progress on an advanced before the completion of 18 credits of graduDual Majors degree. Graduate assistants must complete a ate course work. The program is developed under the guidFor the M.A., M.S., Ed.M., M.F., or Ph.D. minimum of 9 credits during each term of ance of the major and minor professors and degree, a student may select two graduate appointment. Persons interested in assistmajor areas to pursue instead of the tradiantships should write directly to the depart- signed by the major and minor professors and the chairman of the academic unit tional single major. ment concerned. before filing in the Graduate School office. Fellowships, sponsored by the university, Graduate Courses Time Limit industry, foundations, and government Only courses numbered in the 500s and Students must complete all work for a masagencies, are available to superior graduate 600s carry graduate credit. Blanket-numter's degree within seven years, including students for graduate study in various bered courses (courses whose middle digit is transferred credits, course work, thesis (if departments at Oregon State University. zero) carrying graduate credit may be repeatrequired), and all examinations. These fellowships are awarded through the ed to the maximum as indicated below. Thesis departments concerned, and application A maximum of 6 credits of blanket numAn examination copy of the master's thesis should be made by writing to the departbers other than thesis, or research in lieu of must be presented to the Graduate School thesis for nonthesis degrees, may be used on ment. Fellows render no service to the instioffice at least one week prior to the final tution, may carry 16 term credits, and pay the master's degree program; 15 such credits oral examination. Additional examination full tuition, except as noted. See the Gradumay be used toward the doctorate. Blanketcopies of the thesis are distributed by the ate Catalog for a list of fellowships. numbered transferred courses will be considstudent at this time to other members of the ered as part of this maximum. DEGREE PROGRAMS examining committee, including the GraduMASTER OF ARTS AND Meetings and Exam Schedules ate Council Representative. Program meetings and preliminary and final MASTER OF SCIENCE Within six weeks after the final oral, two Credit Requirement examinations may be held during any periunbound copies of the thesis for the library, All master's degrees require a minimum of od when school is in session. including copies of the abstract, must be 45 graduate credits including the thesis (6 to deposited in the Graduate School office. If Petitions these copies are submitted after the initial A student who wishes to deviate from the 12 credits) or paper (3 to 6 credits) when six-week period, the student may be subject normal Graduate School regulations and required. Credits used in one master's proprocedures may present his or her problemgram may not be used in an additional mas- to reexamination. ter's program. Approximately two thirds of in a letter to the Graduate School, signed by Full information concerning the prescribed style for thesis is given in the bookthe student and his or her major professor. the work (30 credits) must be in the major and one third (15 credits) in the minor. let, "Preparation of the Thesis," available at Diploma Application Residence Requirements the OSU Book Store. Graduate students wishing a diploma must The residence requirement for the master's Final Examinations complete an application supplied by the degree is 30 credits on this campus after Graduate School. This form should be subSuccessful completion of a final oral examiadmission as a graduate student. These 30 mitted to the Graduate School the term nation is required for all Master of Science credits must appear on the master's degree before the final examination is taken. and Master of Arts degrees. The examination program. (This does not include credits should be scheduled for two hours. GRADUATE FEES reserved as an undergraduate or postbacWhen a thesis is involved, about half the Graduate students registered for 9 term cred- calaureate student nor credits taken as a time should be devoted to the thesis and its of work or more pay tuition and fees in postbaccalaureate or non-degree student or accordance with the schedule printed in the credit for courses offered through the Office related areas. The examining committee consists of at least four members of the gradFees and Deposits section of this catalog. of Continuing Higher Education.) uate faculty-two in the major field, one in Students holding teaching or research assist- Transferred Credit the minor field, and a Graduate Council repantships of .15 FTE or greater receive tuition A maximum of 15 quarter credits of graduremission but must pay fees. Graduate stuate work accomplished at another accredited resentative. It is the student's responsibility to obtain his or her own representative from dents registering for 3 to 8 credits of work institution or through the Office of Contina list provided by the Graduate School pay the graduate part-time fee. uing Higher Education at Oregon State UniWhen no thesis is involved, the examinGRADUATE WORK BY STAFF MEMBERS versity may be transferred, provided that: (a) ing committee consists of three members of the work fits into a logical program for the Staff members of Oregon State University the graduate faculty-two in the major field degree; (b) the transfer is approved by the holding rank above that of instructor canand one in the minor field. student's committee, by the department, not receive advanced degrees from OSU. and by the Graduate School, and (c) a grade of B (3.00) or better has been earned. 292 Graduate School One dissenting vote is permitted for both thesis and nonthesis degrees. No more than two re-examinations are permitted by the Graduate School, although academic units may permit fewer re-examinations. The final oral examination must be scheduled in the Graduate School office at least one week prior to the date of the examination. At the time of the final examination, the student must have completed or be registered concurrently in all courses required by the student's program. In addition, the student must have earned a 3.00 GPA in courses required by his or her graduate program and also must have maintained a 3.00 GPA for all courses taken at OSU as a graduate student. OTHER MASTER'S DEGREES MASTER OF AGRICULTURE The program for the Master of Agriculture degree provides a broader and more flexible training in the field of agriculture than the program for the Master of Science degree. Forty-five credits are required in at least three agricultural or agriculturally related fields, with a maximum of 21 credits in any one field. These three fields must be identified on the program. A thesis is not usually prepared, but a paper demanding 3 to 6 credits of work is required. A student's committee consists of a mini- mum of three graduate faculty members-at least one from each field. If a thesis is involved, the committee must also include a Graduate Council Representative. A final oral examination is required. Areas may be agricultural economics, agricultural education, animal science, botany and plant pathology, crop science, fisheries, food science and technology, horticulture, rangeland resources, soil science, wildlife science, or other areas approved by the College of Agricultural Sciences. MASTER OF ARTS IN INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES This degree is granted for attainment of a broad, advanced knowledge and achievement integrated from three fields of study. Any graduate major or minor may serve as a field for this degree. Two of the three fields may be identical if the areas of concentration within these two fields are different. At least one field must be selected from among the departments in the College of Liberal Arts. A minimum of 9 credits in each of the three fields of study is required; at least 12 credits must be taken in the College of Liberal Arts. No more than 21 credits (excluding thesis or research paper credits) will be taken in any field unless the total program exceeds 45 credits. There is no foreign language requirement. No more than 3 credits of blanket-numbered courses in each field of study may be used in the program; thesis credits or research paper credits are exempt from this limitation. The student's committee consists of four members of the graduate faculty-one from each of the three fields and a Graduate Council Representative. A final oral examination is required. There are two options under the program: Thesis option: The thesis must coordinate work in the three fields. The requirement is 6 to 9 credits of thesis. Research Paper option: The research paper does not necessarily integrate work from the three fields, but typically investigates a subject in depth from one or possibly two of the three fields. The requirement is 4 to 7 credits, registered as research, reading and conference, or projects. M. A. T. The Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) is an intensive professional degree program intended to prepare teachers for careers in public school education. Students who successfully complete the M.A.T. are recommended for the Oregon basic teaching certificate upon the positive evaluations of the University and public school supervisors. The professional program in teacher education is full-time and one calendar year in length. Students will enroll each year with their subject area cohort group and complete the program in one year. Teacher certification is offered in the following areas: agricultural education, biology education, chemistry education, elementary education, health education, home economics education, integrated science education, language arts education (English), advanced mathematics education, music education, physical education, and physics education. PROFESSIONAL TEACHER EDUCATION PROGRAM The professional teacher education program has two major components: a 15-credit professional education core that is foundational to and a prerequisite for the 48-credit Master of Arts in Teaching degree. The 48-credit M.A.T. includes a professional education concentration (three credits), professional course work in the teaching specialty (18 to 21 credits), a public school professional internship (15 to 18 credits), and a minimum of nine graduate electives in the subject matter specialization (mathematics, business, literature, etc.). Because the professional teacher education program is a twopart program, including the professional core and the M.A.T., future students may plan their programs as either five-year (with a nine-month study M.A.T.) or as fifth year programs (with 12 months of graduate study including both the professional core and the M.A.T.). The M.A.T. degree requires successful completion of a final oral examination. MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION The Master of Business Administration degree is designed for the individual holding an undergraduate or graduate degree in nonbusiness areas as well as someone with an undergraduate degree in business administration who seeks professional education which will aid him or her to develop into a competent and responsible executive. The program involves a broad study of business administration, rather than intensive work in any one specialized area. The M.B.A. curriculum consists of 45 term credits, including 27-28 credits of specific graduate business courses that provide broad preparation for management and 17-18 credits of elective graduate courses. If the candidate has not had prior training in business subjects, the M.B.A. program includes prerequisite courses and totals about 80 term credits. An M.B.A. candidate whose undergraduate degree was earned in the field of business administration normally will be able to complete the requirements for the M.B.A. degree in one calendar year. The extended program, with prerequisite courses, should take six terms to complete. The M.B.A. degree requires no thesis. However, a written comprehensive examination is required of all M.B.A. candidates. MASTER OF EDUCATION The Master of Education is a professional degree. For the degree, a minimum of 45 term credits in graduate courses (including a maximum of 6 credits of blanket-numbered courses) must be completed; additional credits may be required. A minimum of 9 additional term credits in graduate courses is required for the master's degree in college student services administration (CSSA). The Master of Education degree requires successful completion of a final written examination. Options available under the Master of Education degree are outlined in the Graduate Catalog. MASTER OF FORESTRY The Master of Forestry degree is intended for potential administrators and professional forestry specialists in public and private organizations where persons of broad ability and broad technical education are demanded. At least 21 credits are to be selected within a major field of forestry and as many as 24 credits may be elected from other related fields. A thesis is not required, but a technical report, on an approved topic, correlated with courses in the major fields or assigned or approved topics, must be submitted. A final oral examination is required. MASTER OF OCEAN ENGINEERING The Civil Engineering Department offers a Master of Ocean Engineering degree to those students who complete a specially designed, rigorous core course of designated ocean engineering subjects. Other courses outside the core area are permitted. A thesis and final oral examination are required. DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY General Requirements The degree of Doctor of Philosophy is granted primarily for creative attainments. There is no rigid credit requirement; however, the equivalent of at least three years of full-time Graduate School graduate work beyond the bachelor's degree is required. A minimum of one full-time academic year should be devoted to the preparation of the thesis. Graduate Study Program The student's doctoral study program is formulated and approved subject to departmental policies at a formal meeting of his or her doctoral committee, which consists of a minimum of five members of the graduate faculty, including two from the major department and a representative of the Graduate Council. If a minor is declared, it must consist of at least 18 credits (15 credits for an integrated minor) and the committee must include a member from the minor department. The equivalent of one full-time academic year of regular non-blanket course work must be included on a doctoral program. The program meeting is scheduled in the Graduate School one week in advance. No more than 15 credits of blanket-numbered courses, other than thesis, may be included in the doctoral program. A regular graduate student who holds a master's degree must file a study program with the Graduate School by the end of one calendar year of enrollment as a doctoral student. A regular graduate student who does not hold a master's degree must file a study program with the Graduate School by the end of the fifth quarter of enrollment as a doctoral student. Residence For the doctoral degree, the residence requirement consists of two parts: (1) the student must have enrolled for three out of four consecutive quarters at Oregon State University; and (2) a minimum of 36 credits of graduate work must have been completed at OSU. Adequate fulfillment of the residence requirement is determined by the Graduate School. Language Requirements The foreign language requirement is deter- mined by the student's doctoral committee. Foreign language requirements must be completed before the oral preliminary examination. Preliminary Examinations The student working toward the doctorate must pass a comprehensive preliminary examination (at least partly oral) in his or her major and minor subjects. Most programs require a written comprehensive examination to be taken before the oral preliminary examination. The content, length, timing, passing standard, and repeatability of this examination are at the discretion of the major department. The purpose of the oral preliminary examination is to determine the student's understanding of his or her major and minor fields and to assess the student's capability for research. Advancement to candidacy is contingent on passing this preliminary examination. If more than one negative vote is recorded by the examination com- mittee, the candidate will have failed the examination. Oral preliminary examinations must be scheduled in the Graduate School one week in advance. At least one complete academic term must elapse between the time of the oral preliminary examination and final oral examination. The final oral examination must be taken within five years after the oral preliminary examination. If more than five years elapse, the candidate will be required to take another oral preliminary examination. For additional details concerning the preliminary examination, consult the Graduate Catalog. Thesis Every candidate for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy must submit a thesis embodying the results of research and giving evidence of originality and ability in independent investigation. The preparation of an acceptable dissertation will require at least one full-time academic year. The booklet "Preparation of the Thesis" is available at the bookstore. Regulations concerning the doctoral dis- sertation are the same as those for the master's degree with the following exceptions: An examination copy of the thesis must be presented to the Graduate School office at least two weeks prior to the final oral examination; within six weeks, two final copies of the thesis for the library and one extra copy of the abstract must be deposited unbound in the Graduate School office. An abstract of the doctoral thesis of not more than 350 words will be published by University Microfilms in Dissertation Abstracts. Final Examination After completion or while concurrently registered for all work required by the program, the student must pass a final doctoral exam- ination which may be written in part but must include an oral examination. The examining committee consists of the student's doctoral committee and any additional members, including professors from other institutions, whom the major department may recommend. In the oral examination, the candidate is expected to defend his or her thesis and to show a satisfactory knowledge of his or her field. If more than one negative vote is recorded by the examining committee, the candidate will have failed the examination. No more than two re-examinations are permitted by the Graduate School, although academic units may permit fewer re-examinations. DOCTOR OF EDUCATION The Ed.D. program is a degree program with a major in education. It is intended for the educational professional whose career path is that of educational or teaching specialist, administrator, or other practitioner in the public schools, post secondary institutions of higher education, or in business and 293 industry. Its focus is on the application of knowledge to learning and teaching environments in public and private settings. The Ed.D. program is designed to prepare educational leaders in community college education, college student services administration, teacher education, and training and development. A master's degree in Education or a related field, or equivalent to a master's degree in postbaccalaureate course work is required for admission. In addition, the School of Education requires the following: 1) minimum professional experience as defined by each program, 2) letter or statement of professional objectives for doctoral study and area of specialization within education, 3) three letters of recommendation, and 4) either the Graduate Record Examination or the Miller Analogies Test. Applicants to the Ed.D. program must have significant experience in an education or education-related setting such as teaching, school administration, curriculum specialist, instructional specialist, child/youth counselor, supervisor; or in a setting where the primary function is education. In general, the following requirements are in effect for the Ed.D.: 1) a minimum of 108 credits beyond the baccalaureate degree, 2) enrollment for three out of four consecutive quarters and the completion of a minimum of 36 credits, 3) a dissertation of no less than 24 credits, 4) a mentored internship in an appropriate work setting for a minimum of 12 credits, 5) a minimum of 48 graduate credits in an area of specialty in Education, 6) completion of 24 credits of core seminars, and 7) completion of the core courses in research. Procedures and requirements for preliminary and final examinations and thesis are similar to those of the Doctor of Philosophy degree. INTERDISCIPLINARY PROGRAMS There are several interdisciplinary programs with the Graduate School as their academic unit. These are interdisciplinary studies (M.A.I.S.), plant physiology (M.S., Ph.D.), and toxicology (M.S., Ph.D.). MASTER OF ARTS IN INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES (M.A.I.S.) Programs participating in this degree are adult education (not as a primary area of concentration); agricultural and resource economics; animal science; anthropology; apparel, interiors, and merchandising; art; atmospheric sciences; biochemistry and biophysics; bioresource engineering; botany and plant pathology; business administration (not as a primary area of concentration); chemical engineering; chemistry; civil engineering; community college education; computer science; economics; education; electrical and computer engineering; English; entomology; environmental health management; extension methods; family resource management; fisheries and wildlife; 294 Graduate School food science and technology; foreign languages and literatures (French, German, or Spanish); forest engineering; forest products; forest resources; forest science; general science; genetics; geography (not as a primary area of concentration); geology; gerontology; health and safety administration; health education; history; home economics; horticulture; human development and family studies; human performance; industrial engineering; international agricultural development; materials science; mathematics; mechanical engineering; microbiology; movement studies for the disabled; museum studies; music; nutrition and food management; operations research; pharmacy; philosophy; physical education; physics; political science; poultry science; psychology; rangeland resources; scientific and technical communication; sociology; soil science; speech communication; statistics; toxicology; water resources; women studies; and zoology. Courses IST 501. RESEARCH (TBA). IST 503. THESIS (TBA). IST 505. READING AND CONFERENCE (TBA). IST 506. PROJECTS (TBA). TOXICOLOGY Toxicology is an interdisciplinary graduate program administered by the Graduate School. The toxicology program leads to the degrees of Master of Science or Doctor of Philosophy with a major in toxicology and is designed to prepare individuals for professional positions as toxicologists in industry, government, and academic institutions. Biochemical, chemical, and pathological approaches will be emphasized in the following areas of toxicology: analytical, aquatic, biochemical, comparative, environmental, food, and general. The faculty is drawn from academic departments in the Colleges of Science, Agricultural Sciences, Pharmacy, Veterinary Medicine, Engineering, and the staff of the Marine Science Center. Students who wish to enter the program should have a B.S. degree (or equivalent) in a science field related to, or offering preparation for, the toxicology program. Courses in toxicology also may be taken by M.S. or Ph.D. candidates in engineering or the basic sciences. Students in the program are expected to attend and participate in the Toxicology Seminar Class and are expected to develop an integrated minor related to their own area of sub-specialization as determined by their graduate committees. A small number of graduate research assistantships are offered to well-qualified students. Courses TOX 430/TOX 530. CHEMICAL BEHAVIOR IN THE ENVIRONMENT (3). Applications of chemical concepts in the definition and solution of pollution problems; analytical considerations, thermodynamic factors influencing moverment of chemicals, physical and metabolic transformations occurring in the environment. PREREQ: CH 106, CH 331; senior standing. CROSSLISTED as AC 430/AC 530. TOX 445/TOX 545. ON-LINE TOXICOLOGY DATA SYSTEMS (3). Use of on-line systems (Toxline; CASOnline, etc.) to obtain bibliographic and other data relating to toxicology and application of PROPHET system for toxicological data analysis. PREREQ: BB 450, BB 451/ CROSSLISTED as AC 445/AC 545, TOX 445/TOX 545. TOX 501. RESEARCH (TBA). TOX 503. THESIS (TBA). TOX 505. READING AND CONFERENCE (TBA). TOX 507. SEMINAR (TBA). TOX 520. COMPARATIVE METABOLISM OF FOREIGN COMPOUNDS (3). Metabolism of exogenous chemi- cals by plants and animals and relation to environmental problems; comparative aspects of metabolic processes; interacting effects of other chemicals, nutritional and environmental variables; metabolic aspects of selective toxicity. PREREQ: BB 450, BB 451. Offered alternate years. CROSSLISTED as AC 520. Graduate School TOX 528. CHEMICAL ANALYSIS OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESIDUES (3). Separation and analysis of chemical pollutants in the environment; considerations in sampling, separation techniques, methods of chemical analysis used for analysis and confirmation of trace levels of organic chemicals and heavy metals. PREREQ: CH 428. CROSSLISTED as AC 528. TOX 545. ON-LINE TOXICOLOGY DATA SYSTEMS (2). Use of on-line systems (Toxline, CAS-Online, etc.) to obtain bibliographic and other data relating to toxicology and application of PROPHET system for toxicological data analysis. PREREQ: BB 450 or BB 451 and graduate standing. CROSSLISTED as AC 545. TOX 601. RESEARCH (TBA). TOX 603. THESIS (TBA). TOX 605. READING AND CONFERENCE (TBA). TOX 607. SEMINAR (TBA). Terms and credits to be arranged for the courses listed above. PLANT PHYSIOLOGY Plant physiology is a complex interdisciplinary field which requires broad training in the plant sciences and in such varied disciplines as physics, chemistry, biochemistry, genetics, and statistics. Courses relevant to plant physiology, and active research programs in plant physiology are found in many departments and in several colleges of the University. The curriculum reflects the need for breadth of training and draws upon courses from a number of departments of the University. The core curricula for programs leading to the Ph.D. and M.S. degrees in plant physiology are listed below. Ph.D. Program Plant Physiology One course in each of four areas (11-12) Plant Metabolism BOT 532. Photobiology of Plants (3) BOT 598. Advanced Topics in Plant and Microbial Metabolism (3) BB 653. Plant Biochemistry (3) Water, Nutrition, and Transport CSS 655. Plant Water Relations (3) HORT 516. Plant Nutrition (3) HORT 623. Phloem Transport (3) Plant Growth and Development BOT 533. Hormonal Regulation of Plant Growth & Development (3) BOT 593. Selected Topics: Plant Cell and Molecular Biology (3) HORT 541. Plant Tissue, Cell and Protoplast Culture (2) Environmental Physiology FS 541. Forest Tree Physiology (4) BOT 588. EnvironmentalPhysiology of Plants (4) HORT 629. Plant Dormancy and Stress Physiology (3) RNG 643. And Land Plant Physiology (4) Biochemistry 295 JOINT CAMPUS PROGRAM BB 590, BB 591, BB 592. Biochemistry (9) Joint-campus programs offer the OSU graduGenetics/Cellular Biology ate student access to specialized instructionA graduate-level course in genetics or molecu- al and research sources of other universities lar biology (3). within the Oregon State System of Higher Education through a single matriculation and registration. Students participating in a joint-campus program are considered students of their home university. OSU students follow the standard advising and registration procedures, registering for all courses at OSU irrespective of the campus on which the course is offered. The OSU Registrar's Office will record all credit earned on any campus by OSU students in a jointcampus program. Tuition and fees will be the same as if all courses were taken at Ore75) gon State University. Total Program (108) At present, two campuses of the OSSHE M.S. Program participate with OSU in the joint-campus Plant Physiology program: the University of Oregon and One course from at least two of the areas listed Western Oregon State College. in the Ph.D. curriculum. Any regularly enrolled graduate student at Biochemistry OSU may enroll in graduate courses at the BB 550, BB 551. General Biochemistry (7) University of Oregon in Eugene or at WestAdvanced Laboratory Methods ern Oregon State College in Monmouth BB 593. Biochemistry Laboratory (2) when the courses are a part of his or her Other approved graduate program. Credits earned At least two other courses from the Ph.D. core at the U of 0 or WOSC through the jointcurriculum (5-6) campus program are considered transfer Advanced Laboratory Methods BB 593. Biochemistry Laboratory (2) Other laboratory course(s) consistent with the goals of the student (2). Seminars Two seminar presentations, including one on a different topic than the thesis. Total Credits (Minimal Requirements) Required core courses (27-32) Seminars (2) Research, thesis and supportive electives (68- Seminars Two seminar presentations, including one on the thesis research. Total Credits Core Courses (19-22) Seminars (2) Research, thesis, and supportive electives (21-24) Total Program (45) Courses PP 501. RESEARCH (TBA). PP 503. THESIS (TBA). PP 505. READING AND CONFERENCE (TBA). PP 507. SEMINAR (TBA). PP 601. RESEARCH (TBA). PP 603. THESIS (TBA). PP 605. READING AND CONFERENCE (TBA). PP 607. SEMINAR (TBA). CONCURRENT ENROLLMENT Oregon State University students paying full tuition may enroll for courses through other colleges and universities of the Oregon State System of Higher Education at no additional cost in the concurrent enrollment program. Complete details of policies and procedures are available in the Registrar's Office. credits. OFF-CAMPUS PROGRAMS Off-campus degree programs are offered at a number of localities throughout Oregon. Further information regarding these programs may be obtained from the Graduate School. WICHE REGIONAL GRADUATE PROGRAMS The following degrees are offered under WICHE (Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education) regional graduate programs at OSU: Ph.D. in family resource management (Department of Human Development and Family Sciences); Ph.D. in nutrition and food management (Department of Nutrition and Food Management); M.S., Ph.D. in genetics (Genetics Program); Ph.D. in human development and family studies (Department of Human Development and Family Sciences); M.A., M.S. in marine resource management (College of Oceanography); M.A., M.S., Ph.D. in oceanography (College of Oceanography); M.A., M.S., in operations research (Department of Statistics); M.Ag., M.S., Ph.D. in poultry science (Department of Animal Sciences); and M.S., Ph.D. in toxicology (Toxicology Program). Students from Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming who are accepted into these programs will be treated as res- ident students for tuition purposes. Information about the above programs may be obtained from the college, program, or department indicated. b N 297 esearch is supported by appropriations to experiment stations, institutes, and centers, as well as by grants from private and public agencies for institutional and indi- Advancement of human knowledge and provision of technical and technological services to the commonwealth are recognized functions of institutions of higher education. Research to advance human knowledge is encouraged and assist- ed at Oregon State University by general and directed research funds and is conducted within departments, colleges, centers, and institutes as a part of normal academic activity. vidual projects. The General Research Fund and institutional grant from Public Health Service (PHS) are administered with the advice of the Research Council. Separately organized research units include the following: Agricultural Experiment Station Engineering Experiment Station Environmental Remote Sensing Applications Laboratory Forest Research Laboratory Sea Grant College Program Research Centers Center for Advanced Materials Research Center for Analysis of Environmental Change Center for Gene Research and Biotech- nology Center for the Humanities Center for Study of the First Americans Environmental Health Sciences Center Integrated Plant Protection Center Laboratory Animal Resources Marine/Freshwater Biomedical Sciences Center Mark O. Hatfield Marine Science Center Oregon Productivity and Technology Center Radiation Center Survey Research Center Western Rural Development Center Research Institutes Cooperative Institute for Marine Resources Studies Nuclear Science and Engineering Institute Nutrition Research Institute Transportation Research Institute Water Resources Research Institute Research Consortia Advanced Science and Technology Institute (ASTI) Consortium for International Development (CID) Consortium for International Fisheries and Aquaculture Development (CIFAD) University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR) The vice president for research coordinates efforts of the various research organizations of the University. The vice president encourages and assists faculty members in the development of research programs and in handling grant and contract applications; advises the president of the University regarding general progress of the institution's research programs; works to ensure maximum opportunity for the integration of graduate instruction and research; and maintains a technology transfer program for researchers who identify new devices and/or processes useful to the public. Special evaluations are made of patent ownership provisions to assure that the interests of the inventor, the University, and the state are best served. With the advice of the Research Council, the vice president allocates funds from the PHS grant and other general research funds. The vice president also coordinates administration of grant and contract operations with the director of business affairs to aid the work of faculty and to ensure compliance with University, state, and federal regulations. GRANTS FROM RESEARCH OFFICE The General Research Fund is primarily intended to provide "seed money" for developing new concepts and to support faculty research that is not supported by organized or directed programs of other research organizations on or off campus. Faculty members with the rank of instructor and above are eligible to apply for support from the fund. Funds may be used for supplies, travel, equipment, and wages. Support will not be given to provide data for theses leading to advanced degrees, subject matter for a specific course, or information for use with administrative functions. Faculty summer and sabbatical leave salaries are not supported. The NIH Biomedical Research Support Grant is used to impose and foster healthrelated research. Guidelines given above for the General Research fund also apply. Allocation of these funds from the Research Office is made with the advice of the Research Council. Faculty members may submit applications to the Research Council for support from the General Research Fund and the PHS institutional grant at any time. ADVANCED SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY INSTITUTE Robert S. McQuate, Executive Director The Advanced Science and Technology Institute (ASTI) is a cooperative organization between Oregon State University, the University of Oregon, Oregon Health Sciences University, and Portland State University. The program objective is to enable university-based research more accessible to the private sector. Founded in 1983, ASTI supports the research interests of three types of corporations: those whose relatively narrow product research can benefit from exposure to wider research leading to new technolo- ADMINISTRATION GEORGE H. KELLER Vice President for Research, Graduate Studies, and International Programs 298 Research gies and products; those whose research requires contact with the "cutting edge" of basic research to remain competitive; and those too small to afford significant in house research and need to rely on technology transfer from universities. Effective communication between the universities and businesses is a key component of ASTI's success. Access to university research is gained through the publication of a quarterly newsletter, cooperative research projects with industry, conferences and seminars, and the Industrial Associates Program. ASTI participates in technology transfer activities and promotes statewide economic development through involvement with researchers at the participating universities. AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION Thayne R. Dutson, Director V. V. Volk, Associate Director B. Sorte, Assistant Director The Oregon Agricultural Experiment Station was organized July 1, 1888, in accordance with the Hatch Act of 1887. It now includes a central station at Corvallis and ten branch stations in the major crop and climate areas of Oregon, assuring that its research program is close to the people and the needs of Oregon agriculture. The station is the principal agricultural research agency in the state. Its mission is to conduct research and demonstrations in the agricultural, biological, social, and environmental sciences that contribute to the economic and social welfare of Oregon. The products of its research help to: 1) ensure a stable and productive agriculture through wise management and use of the soil, water, wildlife, and other natural resources of the state; 2) protect crops and animals from insects, diseases, and other hazards; 3) improve the efficiency of agricultural production by developing integrated system approaches to management; 4) develop new agricultural products and processes and enhance quality of the state's food products; 5) improve the marketing of Oregon's agricultural products; 6) promote community development and develop the ability of both rural and urban people to provide better housing, jobs, and services to people of the state; 7) improve the nutritional value and quality of food and protect the consumers of Oregon's food products; 8) protect and improve the environment and quality of living for residents of the state; 9) assist developing countries in agriculture to promote trade with the United States and alleviate world hunger. The station conducts research in the following departments and colleges: agricultural and resource economics, agricultural chemistry, animal sciences, bioresource engineering, botany and plant pathology, crop and soil science, entomology, fisheries and wildlife, food science and technology, home economics, horticulture, microbiology; rangeland resources, statistics, and veterinary medicine. Research is supported in other units such as the Center for Gene Research and Biotechnology, the Environmental Health Sciences Center, and the Western Rural Development Center. The Central Oregon Agricultural Research Center (Madras and Powell Butte), Eastern Oregon Agricultural Research Center (Burns and Union), Klamath Experiment Station (Klamath Falls), Malheur Experiment Station (Ontario), Hermiston Agricultural Research & Extension Center (Hermiston), MidColumbia Agricultural Research & Extension Center (Hood River), North Willamette Research & Extension Center (Aurora), Columbia Basin Agricultural Research Center (Pendleton and Moro), Southern Oregon Experiment Station (Medford), and the Coastal Oregon Marine Experiment Station (Newport and Astoria) branch stations provide opportunity for basic and applied field research programs in important agricultural areas of Oregon. The station collaborates with Cooperative Extension, the College of Agricultural Sciences' instructional and international agriculture programs, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Department of Interior, the U.S. Department of Commerce, and other federal and state agencies on research programs of interest to the state, the Pacific Northwest, the nation, and other countries. CENTER FOR ADVANCED MATERIALS RESEARCH John R. Arthur, Director The Center for Advanced Materials Research has been established to strengthen research and education in the properties, synthesis, and understanding of new materials, with special emphasis on materials of importance to Oregon's economy. It is an interdisciplinary program spanning nine departments in the Colleges of Engineering, Forestry, and Science. These are Chemical Engineering, Civil Engineering, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Nuclear Engineering, Forest Products, Chemistry, Mathematics, and Physics. A degree of Master of Science in Materials Science provides for graduate training in materials science. Typically, this degree is pursued in parallel with studies in one of the departments that participate in the center. Areas of research interest in the center are ceramics, composite materials (both natural and engineered), electronic materials, magnetic materials and superconductivity, metallurgy, optical materials, transportation materials, nuclear materials, polymers, surface science, analysis of materials, and theory. These efforts are interdisciplinary, and activity in one of these research areas may involve collaborative research between scientists in different departments. CENTER FOR GENE RESEARCH AND BIOTECHNOLOGY Russel H. Meints, Director The Center for Gene Research and Biotechnology was established in 1983 to strengthen University research and teaching programs that are concerned with the structure, organization, and expression of genetic material, and to promote multidisciplinary basic research projects which will apply this basic information to problems of practical importance. The Center consists of active research scientists who use the techniques of molecular, tissue culture and monoclonal antibodies as well as protein and nucleic acid biochemistry in pursuit of their varied interests. Included are all the basic biological disciplines and the applied sciences of agriculture, forestry, veterinary medicine, food science, pharmacy, and marine science. Examples of specific research areas include cell, tissue, and embryo culture; isolation and characterization of genes; molecular mechanisms of bacterial and viral disease of plants and animals; nitrogen fixation, hormonal control of growth and development; molecular control of gene expression; micropropagation and regeneration of plants; development of vaccines and biological insecticides; tissue culture, molecular and genetic techniques applied to plant and animal breeding programs. A Central Service Laboratory which now includes equipment and technical expertise for peptide sequencing, peptide synthesis, oligonucleotide synthesis, DNA sequencing, and computer-assisted analysis of protein and nucleic acid sequences, is available for faculty and students with active research programs in these areas. A newly created monoclonal antibody preparation facility is now available to the University community. Approximately 65 faculty members are associated with the center and represent academic departments and colleges from throughout the campus. The center is an organizational unit under the vice president for research and graduate studies. Various activities are coordinated by the director in consultation with two advisory groups; one composed of scientists actively engaged in research, the other of administrators from the main academic units and the Agricultural Experiment Station. Research THE CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Peter J. Copek, Director I The Center for the Humanities was established in 1984 as an outgrowth of the Humanities Development Program, which had been engaged in innovative interdisciplinary instructional development since 1977. The center continues to maintain the certificate program in Twentieth Century Studies, developed during the program's years of activity. In addition, the center is committed to the stimulation of humanities research, special activities (conferences, seminars, and film and lecture series), and public programs. The center consists of visiting scholars as well as OSU resident fellows engaged in collective and individual research, and coordinates much of its activity around an annual theme. Themes are recommended by a committee composed of faculty from throughout the campus. The center's fundamental concern is the improvement of the quality of humanities research and teaching at OSU. The center is located just off campus at 811 S.W. Jefferson Avenue. CENTER FOR ANALYSIS OF ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE W. E. Winner, Ph.D., Director The Center for Analysis of Environmental Change was established in 1991 to serve as a focal point for the development of longterm, multidisciplinary environmental studies. Analysis of the processes and impact of environmental change lead to the view that such changes result from human activity and other causes. The purpose of this analytical effort is to both contribute to the development of basic knowledge needed to understand the causes and consequences of environmental change and to foster the wise use and management of natural resources. The center involves participation of scientists from OSU; the Pacific Northwest Experiment Station, USDA Forest Service; the Environmental Research Laboratory-Corvallis, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and the Battelle Northwest Research Laboratory. The Center helps these institutions meet key ecological, environmental, and natural resource research needs. Work includes organizing and coordinating interagency efforts in environmental and ecological sciences, and participation in networks on regional and global scale environmental research. The initial Center scope includes such issues as the effects of global and regional environmental change; the analysis of ecosystem structure and function; ecological restoration; biological, genetic, and ecological diversity; ecosystem process related to natural disaster reduction; the impact of the release of genetically engineered organisms; and political, social, and economic aspects of environmental issues. Thus the Center's broad scope invites the participation of scientists and students from many academic disciplines. Through its publications, seminars, and conferences, as well as through active participation in national and international research activities, the Center seeks to promote greater interest in and understanding of the environmental sciences. CENTER FOR STUDY OF THE FIRST AMERICANS Rob Bonnichsen, Director Patty Good, Manager Charlie Bolen, Lab Director The mission of the Center for Study of the First Americans is the promotion of interdisciplinary scholarly dialogue and research, and the stimulation of public interest on the subject of the peopling of the Americas. Toward these goals, the Center provides leadership and coordination to scholars worldwide; creates and implements programs of study and research involving the physical, biological, and cultural sciences; and desseminates the product of the synergism through public education programs reaching a broad range of groups, from local school children to international scholars. The Center is working toward establishing a program in First American Studies. For more information, write to the Center for Study of the First Americans, Weniger Hall 106, or call (503) 737-4595. UNIVERSITY COMPUTING SERVICES J. E. Skelton, Director The University Computing Services (UCS) provides a focal point for computer-related activities on campus. Its functions include computational services, systems planning and development, consulting services, and maintenance services for computers ranging from microcomputers to supercomputers. The mainframe computers at UCS are a Control Data Corporation Cyber 960 administrative host and a Digital Equipment Corporation VAX 9000/8900 academic host. A campus-wide broadband local area network permits direct communication between campus computing facilities and workstations. OSU is a member of NorthWestNet, which provides high-speed communications service to the National Internet. Other services offered by UCS include graphics production, including interactive displays and drum plotters; optical mark scanning for use in data collection and test scoring; high-speed letter-quality printers; maintenance of popular microcomputers; facilities management; information and support of supercomputing access; and support of statistical processing systems. UCS operates concentrations of microcomputers: three in classroom configurations, in Milne Computer Center, one in Sackett Hall, and and one large facility in Kerr Library that is 299 open 24 hours per day, seven days a week during the regular academic year. In addition to computational facilities, the University Computing Services provides technical consulting services for the formulation and analysis of problems and for considerations of new computer systems. Instructional materials have been prepared to assist students, faculty, and others to acquire an understanding of computers and the many specialized programs and languages available on campus and through national networks. CONSORTIUM FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT (CID) George H. Keller, Roy Arnold, Trustees The Consortium for International Development (CID) is a nonprofit corporation of 11 publicly supported universities located in the western region of the United States. CID's member institutions are the University of Arizona; California State Polytechnic University, Pomona; Colorado State University; the University of Hawaii, Manoa; the University of Idaho; Montana State University; New Mexico State University; Oregon State University; Texas Tech University; Utah State University; Washington State University; and the University of Wyoming. CID's objectives are to encourage and facilitate the involvement of member universities and their faculties in international activities; to provide support for international project planning, implementation, and evaluation; and to assist the member universities' efforts to share their expertise with developing countries. The CID system provides a network through which interested faculty and staff at the member universities can interact with international donor agencies and host countries. It provides a means for each university to enhance its effectiveness in teaching, research, and public service through participation in international development activities. CONSORTIUM FOR INTERNATIONAL FISHERIES AND AQUACULTURE DEVELOPMENT (CIFAD) Richard A. Tubb, Director CIFAD is a group of five U.S. universities that have strong programs in fisheries and aquaculture and that are committed to assisting other countries with fisheries-sector development problems. The consortium was established in 1979 to provide a more effective, coordinated program of research, training, and outreach to the less-developed nations of the world. Oregon State University is the lead institution for the consortium. It coordinates various programs and serves as the consortium's contracting and fiscal agent. Other CIFAD members are the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, the University of Hawaii, Michigan State University, and the University of Michigan. Funding for the CIFAD program activities 300 Research is provided by various international donor agencies such as the Agency for International Development and the World Bank, as well as by host-country governments and by private sector benefactors. The executive office of the consortium maintains a file of resumes of fisheries and aquaculture faculty who can offer long- or short-term technical assistance, advice, and training. Special emphasis is placed on training fisheries personnel from other countries so that they may provide direct technical expertise to people in need. COOPERATIVE INSTITUTE FOR MARINE RESOURCES STUDIES Lavern Weber, Director The Cooperative Institute for Marine Resources Studies was established in 1982 to foster collaborative research between the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and Oregon State University in fisheries and aquaculture, oceanography, and related fields. It also encourages education and training of scientists in disciplines related to marine resources. Administered through the vice president for research, the institute has members from the Northwest and Alaska Fisheries Center and the Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory in Seattle and fifteen departments at OSU. Headquarters are at the Hatfield Marine Science Center in Newport. Fisheries projects currently funded through the institute include research on salmon oceanography, food habits and species composition of nekton, age and biology of rockfishes, and biological and economic consequences of management strategies. Projects related to geology include chemical and radiochemical studies of the subduction-accretion areas along Oregon and Washington and the effects of manganese nodule mining on deep sea benthic communities. The Institute sponsors interdepartmental seminars and workshops and promotes research on living and non-living resources. ENGINEERING EXPERIMENT STATION R. Gary Hicks, Director By act of the Board of Regents of Oregon State College on May 4, 1927, the Engineering Experiment Station was established at Corvallis to serve the state in a manner broadly outlined by the following policy: a. To serve the industries, utilities, professional engineers, public departments, and engineering teachers by making investigations of significance and interest to them. b. To stimulate and elevate engineering education by developing the research spirit in faculty and students. To publish and distribute through bulletins, circulars, and technical articles in periodicals the results of such studies, sur- veys, tests, investigations, and research as will be of greatest benefit to the people of Oregon, and particularly to the state's industries, utilities, and professional engineers. The Engineering Experiment Station is an integral part of the College of Engineering. All staff members and laboratory facilities are available for the investigative work of the station. The associate dean of engineering is the director of the Engineering Experiment Station and guides the operation of the station to conform with state and institutional policies. All research work is carried out by regular departmental engineering faculty and their graduate students. On-going projects are financed by grants and contracts from outside sponsors. It is, therefore, not possible to respond to requests which require research or investigations for which funding is not provided. General areas of research emphasis are listed below, by department. Chemical Engineering-Heat transfer, chemical reactor engineering, biotechnology control, thermodynamics, mass transfer, environmental engineering. Civil Engineering-Environmental engineering, transportation engineering, structural engineering, sediment transport, hydrodynamics, near-shore ocean structures, geotechnical engineering. Computer Science-Parallel computing, software engineering and systems, artificial intelligence, theory of computing. Electrical and Computer Engineering-Solid state electronics, materials engineering, computer engineering, systems engineering, energy systems. Industrial Engineering-Productivity, robotics, expert systems, computer integrated manufacturing systems, artificial intelligence, human factors in transportation. Mechanical Engineering-Design and manufacturing, concurrent engineering, computer aided design, expert systems, robotics, wind power generation, materials science, heat transfer, energy systems, combustion, fluid mechanics. Nuclear Engineering-Space reactor neutronics design, nuclear reactor thermal hydraulics, fusion, nuclear waste management, radioactive material, transportation, reactor operations, management and safety, radiation instrumentation. ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SCIENCES CENTER Donald J. Reed, Director The Environmental Health Sciences Center was established in 1967 as an organizational unit under the vice president for research. It provides coordination and stimulation of vigorous interdisciplinary, environmental health research and training as related to human health. Problems of environmental quality and the resultant effects continue to challenge both the health of man and the ability of man to understand and manage the evolv- ing impact of environmental agents. Solutions to environmental problems require interdisciplinary efforts of professionals in many fields, both to generate new knowledge and to develop a qualified cadre of researchers who can provide the basis for risk assessment. The EHS Center currently brings together and utilizes the variety of professional capabilities of research and teaching faculty, staff, and students from numerous departments, schools, and colleges within OSU. Academic areas include agricultural chemistry, chemistry, biochemistry and biophysics, toxicology, biology, food science and technology, fisheries and wildlife, veterinary medicine, pharmacology, statistics, and engineering. The broad mission of the center encompasses research and encourages research by training and supporting qualified predoctoral candidates and postdoctoral research associates; sponsors conferences, symposia, and meetings for both student training and public communication; and serves as an interdisciplinary resource on human health as related to the environment. Examples of specific research areas of interest include toxicology of environmental chemicals, cellular and biochemical toxicology, immunotoxicology, naturally occurring toxins, carcinogenesis of environmental chemicals, genetic toxicology, movement of chemicals in the environment, mass spectrometric ionization processes and methodologies, solid waste and chemical waste disposal, environmental engineering, and statistical studies, e.g., temporal aspects of cancer risks. New research approaches to investigate effects of toxicants on human health are encouraged through an active, competitive pilot project program. Selected proposals receive funding for preliminary studies, many of which have led to agency funding as major projects. In addition to coordinating the ongoing pre- and postdoctoral program supported by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences in environmental toxicology that emphasizes the determination of mode of action of environmental chemicals, the center administers a visiting scientists program and the M.S./Ph.D. interdisciplinary graduate program in toxicology. Federal environmental health legislation, particularly the Toxic Substances Control Act, has created a greater need for qualified toxicologists. The training of this professional group is designed to meet that need. Biochemical, pathological, and pharmacological approaches are emphasized in the areas of aquatic, biochemical, comparative, environmental, food, and general toxicology-The administrative office of the EHS Center is located in the Agricultural and Life Sciences Building; research and teaching facilities are located in the cooperating departments on campus. Research ENVIRONMENTAL REMOTE SENSING APPLICATIONS LABORATORY William J. Ripple, Director Coincident with the launch of the first Landsat satellite in1972, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration provided funding to Oregon State University for the establishment of the Environmental Remote Sensing Applications Laboratory. NASA and OSU jointly agreed that this campus would be one of a select group of universities to conduct research in the rapidly developing field of remote sensing. Since that beginning, ERSAL scientists, graduate students, colleagues at Oregon State University, and colleagues in state and federal agencies have conducted a variety of programs that integrate remote sensing and related technologies in geographic information systems (GIS). ERSAL is located in the Department of Forest Resources within the College of Forestry at Oregon State University. "Remote sensing" refers to the acquisi- tion, processing, analysis, and interpretation of reflected and emitted radiation from targets of interest, usually features on the surface of the earth: plants, soil, minerals, water, etc. At ERSAL, data acquired from detectors mounted in satellites, aircraft, and field instruments are used to study the spectral properties of vegetation-soil systems. Information regarding these properties is then used to develop techniques for detecting, classifying, mapping, and quantifying vegetation cover and the condition of vegetation. Examples of research topics include landscape ecology, remote sensing of plant cover, forest structure, forest landscape patterns, and wildlife habitat. With combined funding from NASA, other federal and state agencies and private sources, the ERSAL research program develops and applies remote sensing and GIS technology for the study of forest lands and related natural resource problems. FOREST RESEARCH LABORATORY George W. Brown, Dean, Director The Forest Research Laboratory is Oregon's forestry research agency; its director is the dean of Oregon State University's College of Forestry. Established by the Oregon Legislature in 1941, the program is supported by state and federal appropriations and by research grants from public and private sources. In addition to research in campus laboratories and University forests, studies are conducted cooperatively in public and private forests throughout Oregon. Activities are organized within five program areas which draw upon faculty expertise in the College of Forestry's Departments of Forest Engineering, Forest Products, Forest Science, and Forest Resources; and, to a lesser extent, from the Departments of Botany and Plant Pathology, Entomology, Fisheries and Wildlife, and Soil Science. Research program areas are forest regeneration; forest culture and productivity; protecting forests and watersheds; evaluating forest uses and practices; and wood processing and products performance. Interdisciplinary teamwork is characteristic of many of the research projects. The program supports research of graduate students in forest genetics, economics, physiology, biometrics, hydrology, entomology, pathology, forest soils, forest engineering, recreation, forest policy, silviculture, ecology, and wood science. This laboratory's program is designed to provide information enabling wiser public and private decisions concerning the management and use of Oregon's forest resources and the operation of the state's wood-using industries. As a result of this research, Oregon's forests produce more wood products, water, forage, fish, wildlife, and recreation; wood products are harvested and used more efficiently; forests are used more intensively and effectively; employ- ment, production, and profitability in dependent industries are strengthened and assistance is provided in maintaining a quality environment for Oregonians. The Forest Research Laboratory, the Corvallis Forestry Sciences Laboratory of the U.S. Forest Service, and related research conducted elsewhere on campus combine to form the largest concentration of forestry science research in North America. INTEGRATED PLANT PROTECTION CENTER Marcas Kogan, Director The Integrated Plant Protection Center (IPPC) was established in 1991 to expand the programmatic scope and geographic range of activities of the former International Plant Protection Center that was chartered by Oregon State University in 1969. The new IPPC focuses primarily on the development and implementation of integrated pest management programs and in promoting modem pesticide management activities in the state of Oregon. While stressing domestic activities, IPPC will continue to develop, foster, and support effective pest and pesticide management programs in developing countries. IPPC is supported by the Oregon State University Extension Service, the Agricultural Experiment Station, and operates in cooperation with the Office of International Research and Development. The Center is recognized as one of the leading information clearinghouses for weed research and control technology and for small pesticide application equipment. IPPC serves as an extensive specialized source of information on plant protection. IPPC maintains a document collection that is particularly strong in weed science. The collection has been recently expanded to include entomological and general IPM literature with the incorporation of over 10,000 docu- Im ments that were part of the library of the Consortium for International Crop Protection, formerly at the University of Maryland. The combined collections represent one of the most complete informational resource banks on integrated pest management in the USA. IPPC has assumed the role of coordinating unit for pesticide related issues within the Cooperative Extension Service. An office of pesticide coordinator was established, and the Pesticide Applicator Certification training program is under the umbrella of IPPC. In addition, the Center promotes interdisciplinary research and training in integrated pest management on a worldwide basis with emphasis on alternative, non-chemical control methods, including biological control, host plant resistance, and cultural methods. The Center coordinates its activities with several departments in the Colleges of Agricultural Sciences, Forestry, and Science; and it links with other state and federal government agencies, international agencies under the aegis of the United Nations, private foundations, the family of international agricultural research centers and several foreign national research and education institutions. The Center's internationally experienced staff, drawn from several departments at OSU, is supported by an independent administrative infrastructure. LABORATORY ANIMAL RESOURCES Nephi M. Patton, Director Laboratory Animal Resources, is a University-wide service organization. The office is housed in the Laboratory Animal Resources Center. This organization has been charged with the care and humane treatment of all warm- blooded laboratory animals used in research and teaching. Technicians at the center service facilities in eight different buildings on campus. In addition, the following services are provided: procurement and quarantine of all warm-blooded laboratory animals; constant health monitoring of animals and personnel; and consultation with investigators on experimental design, special procedures, and beneficial animal models. MARK 0. HATFIELD MARINE SCIENCE CENTER (Newport, Oregon) Lavern J. Weber, Director The Marine Science Center is located on a 49-acre site in Newport adjacent to Yaquina Bay and one mile from the Pacific Ocean. The facility is operated by the University to serve the general public, the staff of OSU, sister institutions, and cooperating state and federal agencies. The University encourages all workers in the marine sciences whose research, instruction, or extension activities require a coastal site to use the center facilities. Main buildings provide 200,000 square feet of office, library, classroom, and fresh 302 Research and salt water laboratory space and include a public auditorium and aquarium. Buildings include the Marine Science Center, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Marine Region Headquarters, the Newport Aquaculture Laboratory and Research Support Facility of the National Marine Fisheries Service, Environmental Protection Agency, and ship support facilities of the College of Oceanography. Dock areas serve the OSU ship Wecoma and smaller boats from several agencies. There are housing and self-service kitchen facilities for up to 82 students and visiting staff members. Research projects currently involve more than 280 staff members from the Colleges of Agricultural Sciences, Oceanography, Pharmacy, and Science; the Extension Service; the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; the National Marine Fisheries Service; the Ocean Environment Research Division of NOAA; the Cooperative Institute for Marine Resource Studies; the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, and the Coastal Oregon Productivity Enhancement (COPE) program. The instruction program focuses on aquaculture and marine biological aspects of tidal, estuarine, and nearshore marine environments, subjects for which the center's location provides a natural laboratory. Extension work concentrates on programs of interest to the general public and to the coastal fishing industry. Much of the research and extension work of the OSU Sea Grant College Program is conducted at the center. The public area has more than 400,000 visitors annually, including about 12,000 elementary and high school students. Potential users of center facilities are invited to write to the director, outlining their needs. MARINE/FRESHWATER BIOMEDICAL CENTER George S. Bailey, Director The Marine/Freshwater Biomedical Sciences Center has as its mission the development and use of aquatic models, principally the rainbow trout, to investigate environmental problems of human health concern. As recognized by the National Institutes of Health, fish are sensitive, low-cost, comparative vertebrate models that reduce dependence on mammalian species of health-related research. The Center was established initially in 1985 through core support from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, and was formally established as a research Center of Excellence through the State Board of Higher Education in 1989. Center research focuses on cancer and its modulation by dietary environmental factors. A multidisciplinary team of senior investigators and students from three colleges at OSU provide expertise in pharmacology, biochemistry, molecular genetics, analytical chemistry, and pathology in a collaborative environment. Research attention is given to the basic mechanisms and causes of cancer, and to naturally occurring dietary factors capable of preventing or inhibiting the cancer process. The focus of this Center on the interactions between environmental agents, diet, and cancer, including the possibility of dietary chemoprevention, supports the research, teaching, and extension mission of OSU as a land grant university. To support these functions, the Center provides research funds for pilot studies leading to research grant applications, support a schedule of seminars and visiting consultants, provides guidance in program development through annual external program review by invited experts, and supports a trout hatchery/histopathology research core facility that is unique worldwide. NUCLEAR SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING INSTITUTE Arthur G. Johnson, Director Established in 1966, this institute coordinates curricular matters in nuclear science and engineering at the graduate and undergraduate levels. It also implements fellowship programs, graduate training programs, short-course programs, research programs, and seminar programs that are not managed by individual departments and are interdisciplinary in nature. NUTRITION RESEARCH INSTITUTE P. D. Whanger, Chairperson Established in 1965, this institute recognizes that provision of an adequate food supply is a major continuing problem for humanity, and that various disciplines at Oregon State University are uniquely positioned to deal with it. The institute is dedicated to the advancement of knowledge of nutrition and its effective application in the improvement of human health and welfare. The institute has been designed to be complementary to and not competitive with existing administrative units. As such, its broad objectives are the encouragement, stimulation, facilitation, and coordination of research in various areas practiced in relevant departments and colleges of the University. The institute welcomes applications for membership from campus scientists having a major interest in nutrition. Associate membership is available to graduate students and post-doctorals having similar interests. It operates through a chairperson and nutrition advisory group. Activities include sponsorship of visiting lectureships, organization of seminars, symposia and workshops, and assistance with preparation of grant proposals and manuscripts for publication. The institute holds an annual meeting near the end of each academic year at which it recognizes outstanding research contributions in nutrition through the Gary E. Costley Award. OREGON PRODUCTIVITY AND TECHNOLOGY CENTER David H. Gobeli, Director The Oregon Productivity and Technology Center (OPTC) assists Oregon organizations in the management of technology. Located in the College of Business, it is self-supporting, primarily through research contracts. The center draws on both faculty and students from Oregon State University and other Oregon institutions to conduct multidisciplinary research programs in several fields: innovation management, R&D management, total quality management, project management, and performance measurement. The research emphasis is on developing and applying new management techniques in technology-based organizations. Primary services include training program development, coaching, surveys, analyses, performance measurement and consultation, all through research contracts. In addition, books and software for performance measurement are sold, and licenses are provided so other organizations can use products and services developed in the center. RADIATION CENTER Arthur G. Johnson, Director The Radiation Center is a campus-wide instructional and research facility especially designed to accommodate programs involving the use of radiation and radioactive materials. Located in the Center are major items of specialized equipment and unique teaching and research facilities, including a TRIGA-II research nuclear reactor (licensed to operate at 1,100 kilowatts when running at a steady power level and at 3,000 megawatts in the pulsing mode); two cobalt60 gamma irradiators; a 300 kVp X-ray generator; a number of gamma radiation spectrometers and associated germanium detectors; neutron diffraction equipment; a neutron radiography facility capable of taking still or very high speed radiographs; and a variety of instruments for radiation measurements and monitoring. Facilities for radiation work include teaching and research laboratories with up-to-date instrumentation and related equipment for performing neutron activation analysis and radiotracer studies; laboratories for animal and plant experiments involving radioactivity; an instrument calibration facility for radiation protection instrumentation; and facilities for packaging radioactive materials for shipment to national and international destinations. Staff members at the Radiation Center normally receive joint appointments to the Center and to their appropriate academic department. The staff is available to provide a wide variety of services including instruction and/or consultation associated with the feasibility, design, and execution of experiments using radiation and radioactive mate- Research rials, and with safety evaluations relating to experiments or devices involving the use of radioisotopes or other radiation sources. In addition, the Center provides direct support and assistance to teaching and research programs involving nuclear engineering, nuclear and radiation chemistry, radiation health physics, neutron activation analysis, neutron radiography, neutron diffraction, radiation effects on biological systems, radiation dosimetry, production of short- lived radioisotopes, radiation shielding, nuclear instrumentation, emergency response, transportation of radioactive materials, instrument calibration, and radioactive waste disposal. The Center's laboratories and instruments are available to all campus instructional and research programs requiring such support. The Center also accommodates instructional and nuclear research and development programs requested by other universities, by federal and state agencies, and by industrial organizations. In addition, a special neutron activation analysis service for forensic studies is available to all law enforcement specialists operate from within Sea Grant administration and draw upon the resources of the information community at Oregon State University. Sea Grant Communications also prepares news releases, radio programming, and film specials as part of a broader effort to inform the public about marine resource issues. Multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary in operation, the Oregon Sea Grant program involves faculty and students in the Colleges of Liberal Arts, Science, Agricultural Sci- ences, Engineering, Oceanography, and Pharmacy. Participants in the program also include the University of Oregon and the Oregon Health Sciences University. Oregon Sea Grant also maintains close relationships with several research facilities on the Oregon coast. They include the OSU Mark 0. Hatfield Marine Science Center in Newport and the Seafoods Laboratory in Astoria. agencies. The users of Oregon's marine resources are key contributors to the program. A 10-member Sea Grant Advisory Council of marine industry leaders provides external review of program emphasis and progress. SEA GRANT COLLEGE PROGRAM SURVEY RESEARCH CENTER Robert E. Malouf, Director Helen M. Berg, Director The Oregon State University Sea Grant College Program takes an integrated approach to addressing the problems and opportunities of Oregon's marine resources. Oregon Sea Grant's three related primary activitiesresearch, education, and extension ser- The Survey Research Center, established in 1973, operates as a center for research in survey methodology, and to provide research support with regard to survey design, sample selection, questionnaire construction, data collection and reduction, statistical analysis, and the reporting of results. The center is available to departments of the Oregon State System of Higher Education and to other organizations serving the public interest. Charges are made for all work in the center except preliminary consulting. Estimates for project proposals can be obtained upon request. For proposals to be submitted to funding agencies, the center can either submit a joint proposal or act as a subcontractor. Although the center's primary interest is in surveys of human populations, other populations of interest include plants, animals, land areas, and other populations for which surveys can provide useful information. vices-respond to the needs of ocean users and act to stimulate the Oregon economy. Funding for Sea Grant comes from federal and state appropriations as well as contributions from local governments and industry. The major support is a grant from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Program activities are conducted in several interdependent fields. They include coastal management and engineering; ocean productivity and fisheries; marine product development and biotechnology; seafood and health; aquaculture, including disease control and prevention; and law and public policy analysis. Oregon Sea Grant has been an innovator in promoting cooperative Pacific regional and international research and development. The program also provides professional, technical and public education, as well as Extension services through the Sea Grant Extension program. In addition, the Sea Grant Administration office provides support for OSU graduate students to study important marine and coastal problems and to participate in research administration. Oregon Sea Grant Communications offers publication and other media support for program participants. The communications TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH INSTITUTE Chris A. Bell, Director The Transportation Research Institute (TRI) was established in 1962 to enhance research and interaction within the University and to serve as a link with other universities, industry, and government on transportation-related issues. The institute conducts a variety of research efforts, including traditional singledisciplinary and multidisciplinary research, and also serves as a clearinghouse and central source of transportation-related information. um The institute consists of a highly qualified professional and academic staff drawn from the Colleges of Engineering, Forestry, Agricultural Sciences, Oceanography, Business, Science, and Liberal Arts. The major areas of activity include transportation system economics, policy, and regulation; geotechnical engineering and highway materials testing; transportation systems planning, traffic operations, and safety; low-volume road design, construction, and maintenance; transportation for resource development; rural transportation; sociopolitical and behavioral factors; transportation for the elderly and handicapped; and environmental and energy factors. An advisory committee of professionals familiar with the transportation issues and problems in the Northwest provides policy guidance as well as suggestions to the TRI staff. Extensive facilities are available to institute members and students. These include computerized literature search capabilities, an electronic computing center, and a complete soils and materials testing laboratory. The laboratory houses closed-loop servocontrolled test systems, as well as a walk-in cold room for testing frozen soils. Also available are complete hydrology and hydraulic labs for drainage and hydraulic studies and 14,000 acres of timberland reserved for teaching and research, available through the College of Forestry. UNIVERSITY CORPORATION FOR ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH (UCAR) Richard A. Scanlan, Steven K. Esbensen, OSU Member Representatives Through its membership in this national research consortium, Oregon State University has access to extensive facilities and services in support of its research in atmospheric, oceanic, and related sciences. Chief among these is the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boul- der, Colorado. Under the support of the National Science Foundation, this national laboratory conducts significant programs of atmospheric, oceanographic, and solar research in cooperation with member universities, and operates a computing facility built around a CRAY XMP-4800 computer which is accessible to member institutions. UCAR also operates facilities for scientific ballooning, and through NCAR, maintains instrumented research aircraft and an extensive research and data library. In addition to using these facilities, OSU faculty and graduate students participate in numerous seminars, workshops, and scientific meetings and conferences which are held at NCAR throughout the year. Through the corporation, Oregon State also cooperates in various national and international initiatives for research, service, and training in the atmospheric and related sciences. Research 304 WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH INSTITUTE Extensive facilities available to institute members and students include forested watershed lands, streams with a wide range Benno P. Warkentin, Director of characteristics, branch agricultural equipThe Water Resources Research Institute was ment stations, field measuring equipment, established in 1960 to foster, encourage, and soils laboratories, experimental water and facilitate research and education related to waste treatment facilities, freshwater science quantity and quality of water available for laboratories, experimental streams, a beneficial uses. The institute is administered hydraulics laboratory, and a radiation cenunder the Vice President for Research, Grad- ter. Research projects are conducted in the uate Studies, and International Programs, areas of water supply and quality, planning with an executive committee of the deans of and management, systems analysis, legal the Colleges of Agricultural Sciences, Engiand institutional complexities, and water neering, and Forestry. Membership includes uses and use impacts. Research assistantall faculty members in higher education in ships and fellowships are available through Oregon who are engaged in water resources many of the member departments. The research and teaching, currently about 200 institute provides "seed money" for selected persons in more than 40 departments in 12 research and training programs in water universities and colleges in Oregon. The resources. institute assists in organizing multi-discipliThe institute works closely with state and nary groups of University personnel for federal agencies in its research and informaresearch and technology transfer on water tion transfer programs. Seminars are sponmanagement concerns in Oregon. sored during fall and spring terms to address water issues. Research reports are given wide distribution through the institute's information dissemination program. Workshops are organized on topics of current interest. WESTERN RURAL DEVELOPMENT CENTER Russell C. Youmans, Director This center, federally funded through the 17 Western Agricultural Experiment Stations and Cooperative Extension Services, supports regional research and Extension education programs on rural development issues in the western United States. The center is one of four in the nation focusing on applied social science research and education programs with impact on quality of rural life. Proposals for funding are submitted by states in the region for support to extend research or education programs into a regional context. lo z i h1 y.ll fq' J ,:-aA&C r a t- 1- 1 w Summary of Enrollment and Degrees 305 ENROLLMENT BY CURRICULUM AND CLASS, FALL TERM 1992 Fresh Soph Curriculum Junior Senior Undergrad Postbac Undergrad Undergrad Special Total Grad/Prof Total Liberal Arts and Sciences College of Liberal Arts College of Science 340 412 459 311 764 356 990 436 46 60 33 29 2,632 1,604 49 589 2,681 2,193 TOTAL Liberal Arts and Sciences 752 770 1,120 1,426 106 62 4,236 638 4,874 119 423 516 40 124 103 128 297 432 47 118 130 171 43 38 55 9 18 8 8 17 15 5 7 705 1,738 2,169 255 662 707 319 142 543 139 170 190 235 546 693 98 228 262 88 180 447 1,024 1,880 2,712 394 763 1,095 103 469 (excluding duplicates) Professional Curricula College of Agricultural Sciences College of Business College of Engineering College of Forestry College of Health and Human Performance College of Home Economics and Education College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences College of Pharmacy 72 47 College of Veterinary Medicine Graduate School University Exploratory Studies Program 304 111 TOTAL Professional Colleges 1,701 1,310 2,453 2,080 TOTAL Students (excluding duplicates) - -- -- 416 465 61 -- 1 101 388 102 22 1 1 -- 58 -- 2 52 35 3 5 1,613 2,733 2,278 237 3,704 343 431 81 431 510 0 510 55 7,194 2,268 9,462 117 11,430 2,906 14,336 81 SUMMARY OF DEGREES CONFERRED 1991-92 ENROLLMENT BY GENDER AND TERM, 1991-92 Doctor of Education ...........................................................................5 Doctor of Philosophy .....................................................................192 Doctor of Veterinary Medicine .........................................................32 TOTAL Doctorate Degrees ..........................................................229 Master of Agriculture ..........................................................................8 Master of Arts ......................................................................................3 Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies .......................................49 Master of Arts in Teaching ................................................................71 Master of Business Administration ...................................................96 Master of Education ........................................................................117 Master of Forestry ...............................................................................7 Master of Ocean Engineering .............................................................1 Master of Science ............................................................................406 TOTAL Master's Degrees .............................................................758 Bachelor of Arts College of Business ......................................................................62 College of Education .....................................................................1 College of Engineering ..................................................................3 College of Home Economics .........................................................7 College of Liberal Arts ...............................................................237 College of Science ..........................................................................4 Bachelor of Science College of Agricultural Sciences ................................................204 College of Business ....................................................................466 College of Education ...................................................................13 College of Engineering ..............................................................425 College of Forestry ....................................................................... 76 College of Health and Human Performance .............................121 College of Home Economics .....................................................196 College of Liberal Arts ...............................................................639 College of Pharmacy ....................................................................87 College of Science ......................................................................308 Bachelor of Fine Arts College of Liberal Arts .................................................................22 TOTAL Bachelor's Degrees .......................................................2,871 TOTAL DEGREES CONFERRED 1991-92: 3,858 Students receiving: 1 degree ....................................................... 3 702 Term 2 degrees ........................................................... 76 3 degrees .............................................................1 Summer Session, 1991 Fall Term, 1991 Winter Term, 1992 Spring Term, 1992 Summer Session, 1992 Fall Term, 1992 Percentage Men Women Total 2,236 8,595 8,281 7,894 2,742 8,298 57.9 2,220 6,320 6,051 5,771 1,990 6,038 42.1 4,456 14,915 14,332 13,665 4,232 14,336 SOURCE OF STUDENT, FALL TERM, 1992 New Freshmen Transfer Students Special Students Returning Students 1,722 2,041 251 Continuing Students 9,607 715 FULL-TIME/PART-TIME, FALL TERM, 1992 Full-time Part-time Total 863 616 1,479 10.3 11,430 2,906 14,336 10,567 2,290 12,857 Undergraduate Graduate TOTAL 89.7 Percentage GRADUATION RATES (ENTERING FRESHMEN) Class % 4 Years % 5 Years % 6 Years % 7 Years 42.4 42.8 43.4 48.9 49.9 51.4 52.0 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 17.4 17.2 16.0 17.3 - GEOGRAPHIC ORIGIN (RESIDENCY) FALL TERM, 1992 Oregon U.S. (plus Territories and Possessions) International TOTAL Source: OSU Office of Budgets and Planning Number Percent 10,989 1,973 1,374 14,336 76.6 13.8 9.6 100.0 306 Faculty x tF 1 307 EMERITUS FACULTY Carlson, Theodore Harold 1962 Assoc Prof Emeritus status is given to eligible tenured Oregon State University faculty members upon their retirement, in recognition for their years of effective service. As leaders in their fields, many Emeritus faculty members continue to serve the University throughout their retirement. The year listed after each name is the year the faculty member began service at Oregon State. Emeritus Journalism Carter, Ruth Harriet 1955 Senior Instr Emeritus English Castle, Emery N. 1954 Prof Emeritus Economics Conkey, Harlan D. 1969 Prof Emeritus Speech Comm Cormack, Charles William 1963 Prof Emeritus Anthropology Crooks, William Ramsden 1947 Prof Emeritus Psychology Crozier, William Kenneth, Jr. 1966 Prof Emeritus Art Dankleff, Richard Elden 1963 Assoc Prof Emeritus English PRESIDENTS EIMERITUS Mac Vicar, Robert William 1970 President Emeritus & Prof Emeritus Chemistry VICE PRESIDENTS EMERITUS Chick, Robert William 1962 Vice President Emeritus for Student Services, Prof Emeritus Education Parsons, Theran Duane 1955 Vice President Emeritus for Finance & Administration, Prof Emeritus Chemistry Popovich, Milosh 1947 Vice President Emeritus for Administration, Prof Emeritus Mechanical Engineering DEANS EMERITUS Burgess, Fredrick J. 1953 Dean Emeritus Engineering, Prof Emeritus Civil Engineering Calvin, Lyle David 1953 Dean Emeritus Graduate School, Prof Emeritus Statistics Cooney, Wilbur Tarlton 1937 Dean Emeritus Agriculture, Prof Emeritus Poultry Science Gilkey, Gordon Waverly 1947 Dean Emeritus Liberal Arts, Prof Emeritus Art Long, James Waldo 1966 Dean Emeritus Health & Physical Education, Prof Emeritus Physical Education Nicodemus, David Bowman 1950 Dean of Faculty Emeritus, Prof Emeritus Physics Poling, Dan Williams 1937 Dean Emeritus of Men & Prof Emeritus Stoltenberg, Carl Henry 1966 Dean Emeritus Forestry, Prof Emeritus Forest Resources Tucker, Sylvia B. 1975 Dean Emeritus Education, Prof Emeritus Education Wedman, E. Edward 1971 Dean Emeritus Veterinary Medicine, Prof Emeritus Veterinary Medicine Williamson, Stanley E. 1946 Dean Emeritus Education, Prof Emeritus Science Education Wilson, Charles O. 1959 Dean Emeritus Pharmacy, Prof Emeritus Pharm Chem LIBERAL ARTS Adolf, Leonard Allen 1955 Prof Emeritus History Andrick, Virginia 1970 Asst Prof Emeritus Architecture Anton, Peter 1956 Prof Emeritus Philosophy Bowman, Marian Y. 1964 Prof Emeritus Art Brye, Joseph Chester 1947 Prof Emeritus Music Burt, George Sherwin 1966 Assoc Prof Emeritus Psychology Butts, Irene 1947 Instr Emeritus English Cadart-Ricard, Odette 1965 Prof Emeritus French Campbell, William Alexander 1966 Prof Emeritus Music Carlson, Roy Werner 1958 Assoc Prof Emeritus English Davis, Wilbur Arthur 1966 Prof Emeritus Anthropology DeDeurwaerder, Charles A. 1967 Prof Emeritus Landscape Architecture Doler, Thurston Ermon 1949 Prof Emeritus Speech Comm Dom, Harold Clarence 1965 Prof Emeritus Journalism Dost, Jeanne 1973 Prof Emeritus & Dir Emeritus of Women Studies Doudoroff, Eve-Mary 1960-61 1963 Asst Prof Emeritus French & German Ellis, Russell Eugene 1949 Prof Emeritus Architecture Ferran, Francisco Rene 1965 Asst Prof Emeritus Spanish Finnigan, David Francis 1957 Assoc Prof Emeritus English Foreman, Walter Cyril 1948 Prof Emeritus English Fox, Dorothy B. 1928 Assoc Prof Emeritus Art Fuquay, Robert Frank 1953 Prof Emeritus Political Science Garrison, Chester Arthur 1954 Prof Emeritus English Gilkey, Gordon W. 1947 Prof Emeritus Art Groshong, James Willard 1946, 1950 Prof Emeritus English Gunn, Paul 1948 Prof Emeritus Art Harris, Charles N. 1946 Prof Emeritus Speech Comm Harris, Frederick Philip 1967 Prof Emeritus Philosophy Harris, Irwin Cecil 1945 Director Emeritus Student Publications, Prof Emeritus Journalism Harter, Lafayette George Jr. 1960 Prof Emeritus Economics Hewitt, Ray Storla 1953 Prof Emeritus English Hovland, Clarence Warren 1949 Prof Emeritus Religious Studies Jameson, Demetrios G. 1950 Prof Emeritus Art Jeffress, Dean Paget 1963 Asst Prof Emeritus English Jones, Robert 1962 Asst Prof Emeritus English King, Roger Edward 1954 Professor Emeritus English Knapp, James Gilbert 1960 Assoc Prof Emeritus Music Kraft, Walter Carl 1950 Prof Emeritus German Lawrence, Margaret Lucille 1945 Asst Prof Emeritus English Leman, Nancy Farwell 1971 Instr Emeritus English Levine, Gloria A. 1960 Assoc Prof Emeritus Spanish Levine, Shepard 1954 Prof Emeritus Art Ludwig, Martin James 1949 Asst Prof Emeritus English Maclean, Doris G. 1963 Asst Prof Emeritus Foreign Lang & Lit Madden, Theodore Martin 1959 Assoc Prof Emeritus Psychology Maddox, Russell W., Jr. 1950 Prof Emeritus Political Science Martel, Donald Joseph 1947 Prof Emeritus Landscape Architecture McClintock, Thomas Coshow 1959 Assoc Dean Emeritus Liberal Arts & Prof Emeritus History McFarland, Floyd Brant 1964 Prof Emeritus Economics McGrath, Edward G. 1965 Prof Emeritus Political Science Meehan, Margaret Elizabeth 1970 Senior Instr Emeritus History Meehan, Thomas Richard 1962 Prof Emeritus History Metzer, Stuart Miles 1962 Assoc Director Emeritus Facilities Planning & Assoc Prof Emeritus Architecture Mills, William Willis 1954 Prof Emeritus Psychology Norris, Faith Grigsby 1947 Prof Emeritus English O'Connor, John Alan 1949 Prof Emeritus Music Orzech, Ze'ev B. 1957 Prof Emeritus Economics Padfield, Harland Irving 1972 Prof Emeritus Anthropology Patterson, Kenneth Denton 1958 Prof Emeritus Economics Philipp, Kurt David 1963 Assoc Prof Emeritus History Plambeck, Hans Heinrich 1946 Prof Emeritus Sociology Phillips, Robert L. 1957 Prof Emeritus Journalism Rock, John H. 1958 Prof Emeritus Art Rossbacher, Peter Georg 1968 Prof Emeritus Russian Sandgren, Nelson E. 1948 Prof Emeritus Art Shaw, Francis Harding 1955 Prof Emeritus History Sinnard, Herbert Reeves 1929-32, 1934 Prof Emeritus Architecture & Landscape Arch Sjogren, Christine Oertel 1960 Prof Emeritus German Solberg, Ingvald Ben 1947 Assoc Prof Emeritus Landscape Arch Sorenson, Gary W. 1970 Assoc Prof Emeritus Economics Sponenburgh, Mark R. 1961 Prof Emeritus Art Stadsvold, Cyril V. 1963 Assoc Prof Emeritus Art Staver, Frederick Lee 1957 Assoc Prof Emeritus English Taubman, Lisa Waite 1956 Asst Prof Emeritus Psychology Taysom, Wayne P. 1953 Prof Emeritus Art Tentchoff, Dorice M. 1977 Asst Prof Emeritus Anthropology 308 Faculty Wallace, Allice L. 1961 Asst Prof Emeritus Speech Comm Walls, Robert Boen 1947 Prof Emeritus Music Walter, Austin Frederic 1950 Prof Emeritus Political Science Warnath, Charles Frederick 1961 Prof Emeritus Psychology Willey, Dale Herbert 1959 Asst Prof Emeritus English Wilson, Norman William 1947 Assoc Prof Emeritus English Wilson, Odelia Jungers 1958 Assoc Prof Emeritus Music Winger, Carlyn R. 1938 Prof Emeritus Speech Comm Wolfson, Murray 1964 Prof Emeritus Economics Wong, Allen Quan 1967 Prof Emeritus Art Yonker, Nicholas J. 1962 Prof Emeritus Religious Studies Firey, William James 1961 Prof Emeritus Roland, Jean Overholser 1957 Asst Prof Emeritus Mathematics Fredericks, William J. 1962 Prof Emeritus Chemistry Frenkel, Robert Edgar 1965 Prof Emeritus Geography Freund, Harry 1947 Prof Emeritus Chemistry Mathematics Roth, Lewis Franklin 1940 Prof Emeritus Botany Saunders, Roy Bly 1946 Assoc Prof Emeritus Mathematics Schecter, Larry 1955 Prof Emeritus Physics Scott, Allen B. 1941 Prof Emeritus Chemistry Shoemaker, Clara Brink 1970 Prof Emeritus Chemistry Shoemaker, David Powell 1970 Prof Emeritus Chemistry Simons, William Haddock 1966 Prof Emeritus Mathematics Smith, John Wolfgang 1964 Prof Emeritus Mathematics Smith, Kennan Thyler 1968 Prof Emeritus Mathematics Spencer, James Brookes 1963 Assoc Prof Emeritus General Gates, W. Lawrence 1976 Prof Emeritus Atmospheric Sciences Godard, Russell Holcomb 1950 Asst Prof Emeritus Mathematics Hedberg, Kenneth Wayne 1956 Prof Emeritus Chemistry Hewson, Wendell 1968 Prof Emeritus Atmospheric Sciences Highsmith, Richard Morgan Jr. 1947 Prof Emeritus Geography Hisaw, Frederick Lee Jr. 1958 Assoc Prof Emeritus Zoology Zwahlen, Fred Casper. 1950 Prof Emeritus Journalism Jensen, Harold James 1950 Prof Emeritus Botany SCIENCE Allen, Thomas C. 1962 Prof Emeritus Botany & Plant Pathology Jensen, James Herbert 1961 Prof Emeritus Botany Anderson, Arthur W. 1953 Prof Emeritus & Plant Pathology & Plant Pathology Jensen, John Granville 1946 Prof Emeritus Geography Microbiology Anselone, Philip Marshall 1964 Prof Emeritus Mathematics Arnold, Bradford Henry 1947 Prof Emeritus Mathematics Johnston, La Rea Dennis 1959 Sr Instr Emeritus Becker, Robert Richard 1962 Prof Emeritus Biochemistry & Biophysics Lonseth, Arvid T. 1948 Prof Emeritus Mathematics Boedtker, Olaf Alexander 1963 Assoc Prof Emeritus Physics & Head Adviser Emeritus, Science Brady, James Joseph 1937 Prof Emeritus Physics Brandt, William Henry 1956 Assoc Prof Emeritus Botany Brunk, H. Daniel 1969 Prof Emeritus Statistics Burch, David Stewart 1958 Prof Emeritus Physics Calvin, Lyle David 1953 Prof Emeritus Statistics Carter, David S. 1961 Prof Emeritus Mathematics Chambers, Kenton L. 1968 Prof Emeritus Botany Chilcote, William Wesley 1950 Prof Emeritus Botany Christensen, Bert Einar 1931 Prof Emeritus Chemistry Corden, Malcolm Ernest 1958 Prof Emeritus Botany & Plant Pathology Crews, Graydon Talmadge 1948 Prof Emeritus General Science Cutler, Melvin 1963 Prof Emeritus Physics Deardorff, James W. 1978 Prof Emeritus Atmospheric Sciences Decius, John C. 1949 Prof Emeritus Chemistry Decker, Fred W. 1946 Assoc Prof Emeritus Atmospheric Sciences Easterday, Harry Tyson 1960 Prof Emeritus Physics Elliker, Paul Reuben 1947 Prof Emeritus Microbiology Evans, Harold J. 1961 Distinguished Professor Emeritus Plant Physiology & Director Emeritus Nitrogen Fixation Laboratory Faulkenberry, G. David 1967 Prof Emeritus Statistics Botany & Plant Pathology Kaplan, Edward Lynn 1961 Prof Emeritus Mathematics Krueger, Hugo Martin 1948 Prof Emeritus Zoology Science Stalley, Robert Delmer Mathematics 1956 Prof Emeritus Storm, Robert Macleod 1948 Prof Emeritus Zoology Thubeneck, William H. 1955 Prof Emeritus Geology Terriere, Leone C. 1950 Prof Emeritus Entomology VanDyke, Henry 1963 Prof Emeritus General Science Wang, Chili H. 1950 Prof Emeritus Chemistry, Nuclear Engineering, Director Emeritus Radiation Lyford, John Higgins, Jr. 1966 Assoc Prof Emeritus Center Biology Williams, Max Bullock 1941 Prof Emeritus MacDonald, Donald Laurie 1962 Prof Emeritus Chemistry Biochemistry & Biophysics Willis, David Lee 1962 Prof Emeritus Radiation MacVicar, Robert William 1970 ProfEmeritus Biology & General Science Chemistry Yoke, John Thomas 1964 Prof Emeritus Chemistry Marvell, Elliot N. 1958 Prof Emeritus Chemistry Young, Roy A. 1948 Prof Emeritus Plant Pathology Morita, Richard Y. 1962 Prof Emeritus Microbiology Narasimhan, Mysore N.L. 1966 Prof Emeritus Mathematics Newburgh, Robert Warren 1953 Prof Emeritus Biochemistry Nicodemus, David Bowman 1950 Prof Emeritus Physics Norris, Thomas H. 1947 Prof Emeritus Chemistry Northam, Ray 1966 Prof Emeritus Geography Oberhettinger, Fritz 1958 Prof Emeritus Mathematics Oles, Keith Floyd 1961 Prof Emeritus Geosciences Overholser, Donald L. 1965 Sr Instr Emeritus Microbiology Owczarzak, Alfred 1955 Assoc Prof Emeritus Zoology Parsons, Theran Duane 1955 Prof Emeritus Chemistry Peterson, Roger C. 1965 Prof Emeritus Statistics Poole, Albert Roberts 1946 Prof Emeritus Mathematics Powelson, Robert Loran 1956 Prof Emeritus Botany & Plant Pathology Pritchard, Austin Wyatt 1953 Prof Emeritus Zoology AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES Abbott, Mary Eunice 1959 Prof Emeritus Extension Adair, John 1953 Sr Instr Emeritus Animal Sciences Adams, Frank William 1953 Asst Prof Emeritus Agricultural Chemistry Adams, Holyoke P. 1971 Prof Emeritus Animal Sciences Allyn, Margaret Marie 1954 Asst Prof Emeritus Extension Andersen, Wilbert Lowell 1956 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Ed Anderson, Nelson Christian 1946 Prof Emeritus Extension Anderson, Roberta Frasier 1959 Prof Emeritus Extension Anglemier, Allen F. 1956 Prof Emeritus Food Science & Technology Apple, Spencer Butler Jr. 1950 Prof Emeritus Horticulture Appleby, Arnold Pierce 1959 Prof Emeritus Crop & Soil Science Arscott, George H. 1953 Prof Emeritus Poultry Science Bailey, Leeds Crim 1941 Assoc Prof Extension Baron, Lloyd Carol 1945-46 1957 Prof Emeritus Extension a 0 M Faculty Becker, Manning Henry 1948 Prof Emeritus Ag & Res Economics Bedell, Thomas 1966-70, 1973 Prof Emeritus Extension Bernier, Paul E. 1947 Prof Emeritus Poultry Science Berry, Donald Wilson 1954 Prof Emeritus Extension Besse, Ralph Stephen Jr. 1963 Prof Emeritus Int'l Agriculture Binder, Julius Floyd 1952 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Black, Harold Mayfield 1949 Prof Emeritus Extension Blanch, Grant Etherington 1945 Prof Emeritus Ag Sc Res Economics Bluhm, Wilbur L. 1957 Prof Emeritus Extension Bogart, Ralph 1947 Prof Emeritus Animal Sciences Bolton, Floyd E. 1967 Assoc Prof Emeritus Crop Science Bond, Carl Eldon 1949 Prof Emeritus Fisheries & Wildlife Bonham, Earl Edward 1955 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Booster, Dean Emerson 1956 Prof Emeritus Ag Engineering Breese, Wilbur Paul 1953 Prof Emeritus Fisheries & Wildlife Brewer, Donald Haden 1957 Prof Emeritus Crop Science Brooks, Royal Harvard 1967 Prof Emeritus Ag Engineering Brown, Dorothy Furtick 1955 Prof Emeritus Extension Home Economics Brown, Joy Brougher 1962 Asst Prof Emeritus Extension Brown, William Galen 1955 Prof Emeritus Ag & Res Economics Burkhart, Betty Jane 1963 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Burkhart, David James 1961 Prof Emeritus Extension Burkhart, Harry Ray 1972 Asst Prof Emeritus Animal Sciences Burr, James Almon 1951-52 1960 Prof Emeritus Extension Bussard, Marie Harris 1957 Prof Emeritus Extension Cain, Robert E 1956 Prof Emeritus Food Science & Technology Calhoun, Wheeler Jr. 1948 Assoc Prof Emeritus Agronomy Cameron, H. Ronald 1955 Prof Emeritus Plant Pathology Cannon, Lynn Elton 1963 Prof Emeritus Extension Capizzi, Joseph 1955.63 1965 Prof Emeritus Extension Entomology Carter, George Edward 1960 Assoc Prof Emeritus Agronomy Cate, Rufus 1945 Prof Emeritus Extension Cheney, Horace Bellatti 1952 Prof Emeritus Soil Science Chilcote, David O. 1961 Prof Emeritus Crop Science Chilcote, William Wesley 1953 Prof Emeritus Crop Physiology Ching, Te May 11956 Prof Emeritus Crop Science Christensen, Dorothy Jean 1967 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Christensen, Leno Virgil 1957 Assoc Prof Emeritus Ag Education Church, D.C. 1956 Prof Emeritus Animal Sciences Clark, Elsie K. 1960 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Clark, Harry Edwin 1951 Prof Emeritus Extension Claypool, Donald W. 1964 Asst Prof Emeritus Animal Sciences Clevenger, Scott Philip 1945 Asst Prof Emeritus Extension Compton, Oliver Cecil 1948 Prof Emeritus Horticulture Cook, Clive Winston 1944 Asst Prof Emeritus Extension Cooney, Wilbur Tarlton 1937 Prof Emeritus Poultry Science Coolican, Patricia 1978 Prof Emeritus Extension Home Economics Cox, Joseph Rew 1945-50 1957 Director Emeritus Extension & Prof Emeritus Extension Crawford, David 1958 Prof Emeritus Food Science & Technology Cropsey, Myron George 1946 Prof Emeritus Ag Engineering Crowell, Hamblin Howes 1946 Prof Emeritus Entomology Davidson, Tom P. 1950 Asst Prof Emeritus Hermiston Ag Res & Ext Ctr Davis, John Rowland 1971 Prof Emeritus Ag Engineering Dawson, Murray 1958 Prof Emeritus Soil Sci Dost, Frank N. 1975 Prof Emeritus Extension Doudoroff, Peter 1953 Prof Emeritus Fisheries & Wildlife Duncan, Andrew Adrian 1958 Prof Emeritus Horticulture Ebert, Arnold Christian 1936 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Edwards, John Allan 1961 Prof Emeritus Ag & Res Economics England, David C. 1955 Prof Emeritus Animal Sciences Fang, Sheng Chung 1948 Prof Emeritus Chemistry, Ag Chemistry Farrell, William King 1942 Prof Emeritus Extension Fischer, C.M. 1947 Prof Emeritus Extension Fisher, Ermina Jane 1952 Prof Emeritus Extension Foote, Wilson Hoover 1948 Prof Emeritus Crop & Soil Science Foster, Lee Russell 1947 Prof Emeritus Extension Frakes, Rodney 1960 Prof Emeritus Agronomy Frazier, William Allen 1949 Prof Emeritus Horticulture Freed, Virgil Haven 1943 Prof Emeritus Ag Chemistry Friedemann, Dale Herbert 1966 Prof Emeritus Extension Frischknecht, Wilford Dean 1956 Prof Emeritus Extension Frizzell, John Kitchner 1955 Prof Emeritus Extension Funk, Evelyn 1958 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Home Economics Gardner, Ernest Hugh 1966 Prof Emeritus Soil Science Garren, Ralph Jr. 1950 Prof Emeritus Horticulture Gates, W. Lawrence 1976 Prof Emeritus Atmospheric Sciences Gavin, Charles Gerald 1955 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Giles, Donald Edward 1968 Assoc Prof Extension Goetz, Norman 1959 Prof Emeritus Agronomy Ext Program Grabe, Don Frederick 1968 Prof Emeritus Crop & Soil Science Grimes, John Keith 1942-44, 1953 Asst Prof Emeritus Extension Faculty 310 F' Libbey, Leonard Morton 1961 Prof Emeritus Food Science & Technology Likens, Sam T. 1951 Prof Emeritus Ag Chemistry Lombard, Porter Bronson 1963 Prof Emeritus iS Horticulture Long, Jay Bass 1940 Prof Emeritus Wildlife Ecology Lund, Steve 1975 Prof Emeritus Agronomy Lundbom, Dorthy B. 1966 Asst Prof Extension Mack, Harry John 1955 Prof Emeritus Horticulture Marks, Stephen 1956 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension, Ag & Res Economics Marsh, Robert Kendall 1956 Asst Prof Emeritus Extension Martin, Lloyd W. 1967 Prof Emeritus Horticulture Massie, John William 1956 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Matson, Walter Edward 1965 Prof Emeritus Ag Engineering Extension Maxwell, Darrell Clifford 1952-60 1963 Prof u I ip. 1 Emeritus Extension c Groder, Roland 1950 Prof Emeritus Extension & Ag Holthouse, Mary 1965 Asst Prof Emeritus Res Economics Extension Gross, Alvin Eugene 1935 Prof Emeritus Horrell, Elvera Charlotte 1942 Asst Prof Emeritus Agronomy Extension Gross, Louis Henry 1943 Prof Emeritus Extension Huber, James Russell 1947 Prof Emeritus Gurton, John Reginald 1948 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Extension Jendrezejewski, Walter John 1938 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Hagelstein, Fred 1958 Prof Emeritus Extension Jensen, Louisa A. 1938 Prof Emeritus Agronomy Hagen, Ivan John 1969 Sr Instr Emeritus Extension Johnston, Alberta B. 1963 Prof Emeritus Extension Hall, Frances Ann 1930-58, 1961 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Kennick, Walter H. 1956 Prof Emeritus Animal Science Hall, James Dane 1963 Prof Emeritus Fisheries & Wildlife Kerr, Harold Edward 1960 Prof Emeritus Extension Hall, Paige LeRoy 1954 Assoc Prof Emeritus Kifer, Paul E. 1973 Prof Emeritus Food Science, Extension Int'l Research & Development Hamilton, Margaret Elizabeth 1957 Professor Kiigemagi, Ulo 1954 Sr Instr Emeritus Ag Emeritus Extension Chemistry Hansen, Elmer 1935 Prof Emeritus Horticulture Killingsworth, Kenneth 1969 Prof Emeritus Extension Hansen, Herbert E. 1974 Assoc Prof Emeritus Bioresource Engineering Kirk, Dale Earl 1942 Prof Emeritus Ag Engineering Hansen, Hugh J. 1974 Prof Emeritus Extension Klein, Glenn Arthur 1952 Prof Emeritus Extension Education Hansen, Neils John 1943 Prof Emeritus Extension Kuhn, Lee Wallace 1946 Prof Emeritus Fisheries & Hardin, Edward E. 1957 Assoc Prof Emeritus Crop Wildlife Science Landers, John Herbert Jr. 1950 Prof Emeritus Harper, James A. 1942 Prof Emeritus Poultry Extension Science Langmo, Reuben Donald 1948 Assoc Prof Hart, Ralph Daniel 1969 Prof Emeritus Extension Emeritus Ag & Res Economics Harward, Moyle E. 1955 Prof Emeritus Soil Science Lannan, James E., Jr. 1969 Prof Emeritus Fisheries Helfer, Donald 1963 Prof Emeritus Poultry Science & Wildlife Henderson, Robert Wesley 1938-41, 1946 Prof Law, Duncan 1944 Prof Emeritus Food Science & Emeritus Crop Science Technology Hickerson, Hugh 1959 Prof Emeritus Extension Leach, Charles Morley 1950 Prof Emeritus Plant Hilty, Ivy Elizabeth 1959 Asst Prof Emeritus Pathology Extension Lear, Gene Maurice 1939 Prof Emeritus Extension Hoecker, F. Dale 1946-58 1963 Asst Prof Emeritus Lee, Sylvia C. 1952 Prof Emeritus Extension Extension Lee, William O. 1956 Prof Emeritus Crop Science Hoffman, Elbert Neil 1942 Assoc Prof Emeritus Leffel, John A. 1962 Prof Emeritus Extension Agronomy Lesuer, Mary L. 1965 Prof Emeritus Extension Hollands, Harold Fuller 1948 Prof Emeritus Ag & Res Economics McCarty, Raymond Gerald 1953 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension McGuire, William Saxon 1956 Prof Emeritus Crop Science McGill, Lois 1952 Prof Emeritus Food Science & Technology Mellenthin, Walter M. 1950 Prof Emeritus Horticulture Mikesell, O. E. 1934 Prof Emeritus Extension Milleville, Howard 1969 Prof Emeritus Food Science & Technology Minnick, Kenneth Clayton 1944 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Mitchell, Velma Roberta 1958 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Montgomery, Marvin Leonard 1954 Senior Instr Emeritus Ag Chemistry Moore, Bernard Jerry 1970 Sr Instr Emeritus Plant Pathology Morgan, Max 1970 Prof Emeritus Food Science & Technology Mosher, Wayne Delbert 1948 Prof Emeritus Extension Mumford, Dwight Curtis 1938 Prof Emeritus Ag & Res Economics Myers, H. Joe 1948 Prof Emeritus Extension Nelson, E. M. 1946 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Neugart, Zelma R. 1955-63, 1977 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Newell, Ben Allen 1944 Prof Emeritus Extension Novotny, Raymond E. 1952 Prof Emeritus Extension Oester, Louis Milton 1955 Prof Emeritus Extension Oldfield, James Edmund 1949 Prof Emeritus Animal Nutrition Oman, Paul Wilson 1967 Prof Emeritus Entomology Ottaway, George Hollis 1941 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Parker, J. Roland 1930 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Parsons, Jacque E. 1965 Prof Emeritus Extension Passon, David Edward 1960 Prof Emeritus Extension Faculty Peterson, Ray Olaf 1953 Prof Emeritus Extension Sitton, Gordon Russell 1955 Prof Emeritus Ag & Phipps, Wanda 1971 Assoc Prof Emeritus Res Economics Extension Skinner, Francis Asbury 1946 Assoc Prof Emeritus Pumphrey, Floyd Vance 1957 Prof Emeritus Agronomy Raleigh, RobertJ. 1960 Prof Emeritus Eastern Oregon Ag Res Ctr Ralston, Allen T. 1960 Prof Emeritus Animal Extension Science Rasmussen, Donald Lewis 1946 Prof Emeritus Extension Rauen, Paul 1959 Prof Emeritus Extension Reynolds, Guy Elmer 1966 Prof Emeritus Extension Riggert, Craig Edwin 1976 Assoc Prof Extension Roberts, Alfred Nathan 1940 Prof Emeritus Horticulture Roberts, Warren Wayne 1950-52. 1954 Prof Emeritus Extension Rodgers, Jefferson Belton 1946 Prof Emeritus Ag Engineering Rohde, Charles R. 1952 Prof Emeritus Columbia Basin Ag Res Ctr Rosenstiel, Robert George 1946 Assoc Prof Emeritus Entomology Ross, Charles Robert 1946 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Ross, Jackson W. 1961 Prof Emeritus Extension Roy, Doris Mary 1952 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Rudd, Oris Clark 1955 Prof Emeritus Extension Rydrych, Donald J. 1965 Prof Emeritus Crop & Soil Science Salisbury, Ralph William 1949 Prof Emeritus Extension Sander, Gary 1955 Asst Prof Emeritus Extension Forestry Saul, Molly Sylvester 1962 Prof Emeritus Extension Scales, Murle 1947 Prof Emeritus Extension Scheel, Jean Willard 1946 Prof Emeritus Extension Schneiter, George R. 1955 Asst Prof Emeritus Extension Schroeder, Jane 1952 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Schroeder, Walter Greiff 1949 Prof Emeritus Extension Schultz, Harold William 1953 Prof Emeritus Food Science & Technology Seat, Velma Maxwell 1959 Prof Emeritus Ag & Res Economics Shannon, Elfred 1945 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Shearer, Marvin Nobel 1950 Prof Emeritus Ag Engineering Sheets, Willis Arden 1959 Prof Emeritus Extension Shibley, Gloria Olson 1965 Prof Emeritus Extension Simonson, Gerald H. 1961 Prof Emeritus Agronomy Sinnard, Herbert Reeves 1929-32, 1934 Prof Emeritus Ag Engineering Sinnhuber, Russell Otto 1939 Prof Emeritus Food Science & Technology Smith, Howard George 1935 Prof Emeritus Extension 311 Wills, Clayton Stanley 1959 Prof Emeritus Extension Winters, Eugene Philip 1954 Prof Emeritus Extension Witt, James McAuley 1966 Prof Emeritus Ag Smith, Robert L. 1982 Prof Emeritus Extension Chemistry Wolfe, John William 1947 Prof Emeritus Ag Smith, William Charles 1951 Prof Emeritus Engineering Extension Stearling, Robert Howard 1940-42, 1956 Prof Emeritus Extension Woodard, Ernest Steve 1974 Prof Emeritus Extension Wright, Leroy C. 1929 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Yang, Hoya Y. 1943 Prof Emeritus Food Science & Technology Young, Marvin M. 1958 Prof Emeritus Extension Youngberg, Chester Theodore 1952 Prof Emeritus Stebbins, Robert Lloyd 1962 Prof Emeritus Extension Stevely, Robert Hugh 1954 Asst Prof Emeritus Extension Stevenson, Elmer Clark 1967 Assoc Dean Emeritus, Director Emeritus Resident Instruction, Prof Emeritus Horticulture Strawn, Bernice 1959 Prof Emeritus Extension Home Economics Taskerud, Esther Adelia 1947 Prof Emeritus Extension Thienes, John Ralph 1952 Prof Emeritus Extension Thomas, Marion D. 1937-45, 1947 Prof Emeritus Extension, Ag & Res Economics Thompson, John Gray 1948 Prof Emeritus Extension Thompson, Maxine M. 1964 Prof Emeritus Horticulture Thompson, Thomas W. 1949 Prof Emeritus Extension Torbeck, Frances Watts 1958 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Torvend, Palmer Stanley 1939 Prof Emeritus Extension Vandehey, Norbert Joseph 1959 Prof Emeritus Extension Varseveld, George W. 1962 Assoc Prof Emeritus Food Science & Technology Vertrees, Junius Daniel 1949-53, 1957 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Vomocil, James Arthur 1967 Prof Emeritus Crop & Soil Science Von Borstel, Frank Jr. 1948 Prof Emeritus Extension Wales, Joseph 1959 Assoc Prof Emeritus Food Science & Technology Walrod, Dan Coin 1948 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Warren, Charles E. 1953 Prof Emeritus Fisheris & Wildlife Warren, Rex 1934-45, 1947 Prof Emeritus Extension Watkinson, Lois A. 1962 Prof Emeritus Extension Webster, Emma Louise 1953 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Werth, Harold Eldon 1949-51, 1956 Assoc Prof Emeritus Extension Westigard, Peter Hughes 1962 Prof Emeritus Extention Entomology Weswig, Paul Henry 1941 Prof Emeritus Ag Chemistry, Chemistry Weswood, Melvin Niel 1960 Prof Emeritus Horticulture Wilcox, Bert Guy 1962 Prof Emeritus Extension Soil Science Youngberg, Harold Wayne 1960 Prof Emeritus Crop Science Yu, T. C. 1956 Assoc Prof Emeritus Food Science & Technology Yungen, John Alfred 1950 Prof Emeritus Agric Expt Station Zimmerman, Martin Joseph 1950 Prof Emeritus Extension Zundel, Afton 1934-44, 1957 Prof Emeritus Extension Zwick, Robert W. 1964 Assoc Prof Emeritus Entomology BUSINESS Beran, Kurt 1975 Asst Prof Emeritus Business Easton, Edison Ellsworth 1951 Prof Emeritus Business Admin Edwards, Louis Laird 1955 Director Emeritus Careers Planning Placement, Assoc Prof Business Admin Gudger, Charles M. 1970 Assoc Prof Emeritus Business Admin Jones, Hilda Meius 1947 Assoc Prof Emeritus Admin Mgmt Kemp, Patrick S. 1974 Prof Emeritus Accounting Larse, Lloyd Quenderbilt 1940 Prof Emeritus Business Ed Office Admin McCain, Robert Francis 1969 Assoc Prof Emeritus Business Admin Martin, George R. 1967 Assoc Prof Emeritus Accounting Newton, Bryon Louis 1947-48, 1949 Prof Emeritus Business Admin Rettig, Jack Louis 1961 Prof Emeritus Business Admin Shirley, Robert Edwin 1967 Assoc Prof Emeritus Business Admin Soule, B. Linn 1967 Assoc Prof Emeritus Business Admin Stonehill, Arthur Ira 1966 Prof Emeritus Finance Strickler, Lester Braden 1954 Prof Emeritus Business Admin Weiler, Jerome Conrad 1961 Assoc Prof Emeritus Business Admin Wells, Patricia Ann 1974 Prof Emeritus Business Admin Winger, Fred Everett 1947 Prof Emeritus Business Ed Office Admin 312 Faculty ENGINEERING Bell, J. Richard 1962 Prof Emeritus Civil Engineering Boubel, Richard William 1954 Prof Emeritus Mechanical Engineering Burgess, Fredrick J. 1953 Prof Emeritus Civil Engineering Campbell, John Carl 1948 Prof Emeritus Indust & Mfg Engineering Croft, Howard Lester 1957 Prof Emeritus Indust & Mfg Engineering Engesser, William Frederick 1941 Prof Emeritus Indust & Mfg Engineering Frazier, Lloyd McDonald 1947 Prof Emeritus Mechanical Engineering Garrard, James Lathrop 1957 Prof Emeritus Industrial Engineering Gray, James Latimer 1949 Prof Emeritus Industrial & Mfg Engineering Haith, Marvin R. 1943 Prof Emeritus General Engineering Jensen, Leland Christian 1955 Assoc Prof Emeritus Electrical & Computer Engineering Knudsen, James George 1949-52 1953 Prof Emeritus Chemcal Engineering LaBaun, George Bradford 1958 Assoc Prof Emeritus Civil Engineering Laursen, Harold I. 1963 Professor Emeritus Civil Engineering Larson, Milton Byrd 1952 Prof Emeritus Mechanical Engineering Levenspiel, Octave 1968 Prof Emeritus Chemical Engineering Looney, James Chester 1957 Assoc Prof Emeritus Electrical & Computer Engineering Magnusson, Phillip Cooper 1946 Prof Emeritus Electrical & Computer Engineering McClellan, Thomas John 1945-46, 1948 Prof Emeritus Civil Engineering Meredith, Robert Eugene 1959 Assoc Prof Emeritus Chemical Engineering Mingle, John Glenn 1960 Prof Emeritus Mechanical Engineering Nath, John Henry 1970 Prof Emeritus Civil Engineering & Mechanical Engineering Northcraft, Martin Ellis 1955 Assoc Prof Emeritus Civil Engineering Oorthuys, Hendrik Jacob 1941-44, 1957 Assoc Prof Emeritus Electrical & Computer Engineering Paasche, Olaf Gustav 1946 Prof Emeritus Mechanical Engineering Phelps, Robert Elton 1968 Assoc Prof Emeritus Civil Engineering Popovich, Milosh 1947 Prof Emeritus Mechanical Engineering Saugen, John Louis 1964 Assoc Prof Emeritus Electrical & Computer Engineering Short, Robert Allen 1966 Prof Emeritus Electrical & Computer Engineering Slegel, Louis 1945 Prof Emeritus Mechanical Engineering Slotta, Larry Stewart 1962 Prof Emeritus Civil Engineering Smith, Wesley Warren 1947-48,1956 Prof Emeritus Mechanical Engineering Spinrad, Bernard Israel 1972 Prof Emeritus Nuclear Engineering Staton, Warren Spencer 1958 Assoc Prof Emeritus Civil Engineering Stone, Solon Allen 1956 Assoc Dean Emeritus Engineering, Prof Emeritus Electrical & Computer Engineering Thornburgh, George Earl 1952 Prof Emeritus Mechanical Engineering Wang, Chili 1950 Director Emeritus Radiation Center, Prof Emeritus Chemistry, & Nuclear Engineering Weber, Leonard Joseph 1954 Assoc Dean Emeritus Engineering, Prof Emeritus Electrical & Computer Engineering Wicks, Charles Edward 1954 Prof Emeritus Chemical Engineering Slezak, Edward John 1961 Prof Emeritus Forest Recreation Research Stoltenberg, Carl Henry 1966 Prof Emeritus Forest Resources Sutherland, Charles Feam Jr. 1959 Assoc Prof Emeritus Forest Resources VanVliet, Antone Cornelis 1955 Prof Emeritus Forest Products Wheeler, William Perry 1949 Prof Emeritus Forest Mgmt Wilson, Robert Lee 1952 Assoc Prof Emeritus Forest Engineering Yoder, Ray A. 1949 Prof Emeritus Forestry HEALTH & HUMAN PERFORMANCE Albin, Betty Jean 1963 Prof Emeritus Phys Education Anderson, Gordon Wilcox 1962 Prof Emeritus FORESTRY Health Bell, John Frederick 1959 Prof Emeritus Forest Brust, Velda Jean 1964 Assoc Prof Emeritus Phys Mgmt Education Bengtson, George W. 1979 Prof Emeritus Forestry Campbell, Donald Eugene 1969 Prof Emeritus Bever, Dale Nestrund 1961 Prof Emeritus Forest Phys Education Mgmt Cox, Joseph Alfred 1946 Prof Emeritus Phys Bublitz, Walter J. 1966 Prof Emeritus Forest Education Products Cramer, Richard P. 1957 Asst Prof Emeritus Ching, Kim K. 1961 Prof Emeritus Forest Genetics Exercise & Sport Science Currier, Raymond Alan 1961 Assoc Prof Emeritus Dailey, Charles Henry Jr. 1947 Prof Emeritus Phys Forest Products Education Ferrell, William Kreiter 1956 Prof Emeritus Forest Dickinson, R. Vern 1968 Assoc Prof Emeritus Mgmt Exercise & Sport Science Froehlich, Henry A. 1970 Prof Emeritus Forest Drlica, Karl Francis 1950 Assoc Prof Emeritus Phys Engineering Education Graham, Robert D. 1961 Prof Emeritus Forest Ellis, John Kenneth 1964 Prof Emeritus Health Products Foster, Roy Archibald 1955 Prof Emeritus Health Hermann, Richard Karl 1961 Prof Emeritus Forest Ingram, Patricia C. 1971 Asst Prof Emeritus Phys Resources Education Jemison, George Meredith 1969 Prof Emeritus Irvin, Richard Fredrick 1967 Assoc Prof Emeritus Forestry Exercise & Sport Science Johnson, James Wendell 1961 Assoc Prof Emeritus Lambert, Charlotte LaVerne 1966 Prof Emeritus Forest Products Phys Education Kallander, Rudolph Martin 1961 Prof Emeritus Long, James Waldo 1966 Prof Emeritus Phys Forestry Education Kozlik, Charles James 1961 Assoc Prof Emeritus Martin, Don Bruce 1966 Assoc Prof Emeritus Phys Forest Products Education Kramer, Robert 1959 Prof Emeritus Forest Products Martinson, Norman Harry 1958 Assoc Prof Krygier, James Theodore 1954 Prof Emeritus Emeritus Phys Education Forestry Masillonis, Genevieve Jeannette Ann 1960 Assoc Lavender, Denis Peter 1961 Prof Emeritus Forest Prof Emeritus Phys Education Physiology, Forest Science McKalip, William Ward 193 7-42, 1953 Assoc Prof McKimmy, Milford D. 1953 Prof Emeritus Forest Emeritus Phys Education Products Megale, Donald Manuell 1958 Assoc Prof Emeritus McLaren, Earle Kenneth 1963 Assoc Prof Emeritus Phys Education Forest Engineering Moe, Harold William 1935-42 1949 Assoc Prof McMahon, Robert Ormond 1966 Assoc Prof Emeritus Phys Education Emeritus Forest Products O'Shea, John P. 1962 Prof Emeritus Exercise & Miller, Donald James 1961 Assoc Prof Emeritus Sport Science Forest Products Phelps, David Walton 1965 Prof Emeritus Public Milliken, Margaret 1947 Assoc Prof Emeritus Health Forest Recreation Research Pye-Petersen, Lois 1960 Assoc Prof Emeritus Phys O'Leary, John E. 1949 Prof Emeritus Forest Education Engineering Tanselli, Gene Natale 1962 Assoc Prof Emeritus Paine, David Philip 1962 Prof Emeritus Forest Phys Education Mgmt Tillman, Thomas Norman 1969 Asst Prof Emeritus Robinson, Dan D. 1944 Prof Emeritus Forest Mgmt Phys Education Rowley, Marvin Lavern 1973 Sr Instr Forest Thomas, Dale Oren 1956 Prof Emeritus Phys Engineering Education Faculty Torpey, James Edward 1971 Assoc Prof Emeritus Phys Education Weir, Erma Marion 1945 Prof Emeritus Phys Education Wells, Vera Lucille 1948 Asst Prof Emeritus Clothing, Textiles, & Related Arts Wiggenhorn, Miriam 1946 Assoc Prof Emeritus Human Development & Family Studies Williamson, Stanley E. 1946 Prof Emeritus Science Education Wilson, Robert Claude 1949 Asst Prof Emeritus Industrial Education Wood, Carvel W. 1968 Prof Emeritus Education Yearick, Elisabeth Stelle 1966 Prof Emeritus Foods HOME ECONOMICS & EDUCATION Anderson, Edwin LeRoy 1970 Assoc Prof Emeritus Education Atteberr Pat Herman 1966 Prof Emeritus Voc Tech Education Bailleaux, Muriel Woodring 1946-50 1955 Senior Instr Emeritus Foods Nutrition Baker, Katherine Haskell Read 1941 Prof Emeritus Human Development & Family Sciences Barte, Georgene Violette 1959 Assoc Prof Emeritus Nutrition & Food Management Becker, Gerald Lester 1968 Assoc Prof Emeritus Counseling Education Britton, Gwyneth Elaine 1965 Prof Emeritus Education Bubl, Janet Laird 1946-48 1959 1960 Asst Prof Emeritus Clothing, Textiles & Related Arts Carlin, Marian Cushing 1954 Assoc Prof Emeritus Human Development & Family Sciences Charley, Helen Geneva 1944 Prof Emeritus Foods Nutrition Chick, Robert William 1962 Prof Emeritus Education Clark, Glenn Edwin 1968 Prof Emeritus Counseling Education Craven, Gene Francis 1958 Assoc Prof Emeritus Math, Science, & Computer Science Education Cross, Frank Richard 1969 Prof Emeritus Education East, Dorothy May 1961 Assoc Prof Emeritus Foods & Nutrition Edwards, Margaret Ann 1951 Sen Instr Emeritus Foods & Nutrition Fielder, William Rodney 1971 Prof Emeritus Education Fox, Fred W. 1957 Prof Emeritus Science Education Fulmer, Winnifred Keil 1938 Assoc Prof Emeritus Home Economics Gates, Ruth Elizabeth 1969 Prof Emeritus Clothing, Textiles, & Related Arts Grant, Phyllis Emogene 1949 Asst Prof Emeritus Clothing, Textiles, & Related Arts Gravatt, Arthur Eugene 1962-64 1973 Prof Emeritus Human Development & Family Sciences Grieve, Mary Jane 1968 Assoc Prof Emeritus Human Development & Family Sciences Grigsby, Tom Elvin 1974 Prof Emeritus Education Hall, Jack Vernon 1954 Prof Emeritus Elementary Education Harger, Virginia Frances 1967 Prof Emeritus Institutional Management Harter, Charlotte T. 1960 Assoc Prof Emeritus Human Development & Family Sciences Haselton, Shirley S. 1968 Assoc Prof Emeritus Education Hlebichuk, Joseph F. 1971 Assoc Prof Emeritus Education Hoeye, Wyman D. 1968 Assoc Prof Emeritus Education Johnson, Elizabeth Cox 1950-60, 1965 Assoc Prof Emeritus Foods Nutrition 313 Nutrition LIBRARY Brandt, Patricia E. 1962 Prof Emeritus library Chona, Habans Singh 1966 Asst Prof Emeritus Library Euren, Florence Sarah 1946-49 1957 Senior Instr Emeritus Library Franklin, Hugh Lockwood 1978 Prof Emeritus Library Ledbetter, N. Marie 1946 Assoc Prof Emeritus Clothing, Textiles, & Related Arts Lee, Sylvia Lucile 1968 Prof Emeritus Home Horvath, Helen Scruggs 1965 Assoc Prof Emeritus Economics Education Leeland, Albert Lewis 1954 Prof Emeritus Elementary Education Leeland, Lucille Rees 1955 Prof Emeritus Elementary Education Lemon, Berlan 1959 Assoc Prof Emeritus Education Lumpkin, Margaret Catherine 1948 Prof Emeritus Education Meeks, Anna Rugh 1965 Prof Emeritus Education McBride, Marjorie 1966 Prof Emeritus Education Peters, Jean McLeod 1958 Assoc Prof Emeritus Foods & Nutrition Petzel, Florence Eloise 1954-61, 1967 Prof Emeritus Clothing, Textiles, & Related Arts Plants, Constance Patricia 1960 Sr Instr Emeritus Home Economics Plonk, Martha Amanda 1952 Prof Emeritus Human Development & Family Sciences Reichart, Robert R. 1926 Professor Emeritus Education, Forestry Sherburne, James Wilson 1938 Prof Emeritus Community Education Library Sinnard, Harriet King 1934-36, 1940-42. 1963 Asst Prof Emeritus Human Development & Family Sciences Sisson, Carol 1990 Assoc Prof Emeritus Education Smith, Earl Eugene 1957 Prof Emeritus Industrial Education Staton, Maryanne 1949-51, 1958-69, 1972 Prof Emeritus Human Development & Family Sciences Storvick, Clara A. 1945 Prof Emeritus Foods Nutrition Straatman, Marcelle Dorothea 1974 Assoc Prof Human Development & Family Studies Strowbridge, Edwin David Jr. 1964 Assoc Prof Emeritus Education Ten Pas, Henry Arnold 1948 Prof Emeritus Education Tucker, Sylvia B. 1975 Prof Emeritus Education Van Horn, Edna Marjorie 1939 Prof Emeritus Home Economics Administration Library Ho, Phillip Wen Jen 1953 Assoc Prof Emeritus Kelts, Lora Ives 1944 Prof Emeritus Library Lomonte, Rose Marie 1969 Assoc Prof Emeritus Library McDonald, Marguerita 1962 Assoc Prof Emeritus Library Minnick, Miriam Sharp 1957 Prof Emeritus Library Schacht, David Waldron 1967 Assoc Prof Emeritus Library Shou, Stephens Tefen 1952 Prof Emeritus Library Swanson, Stanley Stewart 1962 Assoc Prof Emeritus Library Tingelstad, Gertrude Bernice 1964 Asst Prof Emeritus Library Waldron, Rodney King 1954 Prof Emeritus Library Webber, Nancy Ruth 1971 Asst Prof Emeritus Library OCEANIC & ATMOPHERIC SCIENCES Carey, Andrew Galbraith Jr. 1961 Prof Emeritus Oceanography Couch, Richard William 1966 Assoc Prof Emeritus Oceanography Frolander, Herbert Farley 1959 Prof Emeritus Oceanography Hedgpeth, Joel Walke 1965 Prof Emeritus Oceanography, Marine Science Center Mesecar, Roderick 1963 Assoc Prof Emeritus Oceanography Morita, Richard Yukio 1962 Prof Emeritus Oceanography Neal, Victor Thomas 1964, 1966 Assoc Prof Emeritus Oceanography Neshyba, Stephen Joseph 1965 Prof Emeritus Oceanography Pearcy, William Gordon 1960 Prof Emeritus Oceanography Quinn, William Hewes 1967 Assoc Prof Emeritus Oceanography Strong, Elizabeth 1960 Asst Prof Emeritus Oceanography It M Faculty PHARMACY Doerge, Robert F. 1960 Prof Emeritus Pharmaceutical Chemistry Hermann, Freya Friederike 1962 Assoc Prof Emeritus Pharmacy Larson, Robert E. 1977 Prof Emeritus Pharmacology Lee, Eugene Carlton 1962 Senior Instr Emeritus Pharmacognosy Sager, Robert William 1961 Prof Emeritus Pharmacy Schultz, H. Wayne 1959 Assoc Prof Emeritus Pharmacy Sisson, Harriet Eleanor 1946 Assoc Prof Emeritus Pharmacy Summy, Charles L. 1974 Sr Instr Emeritus Pharmacy Wilson, Charles O. 1959 Prof Emeritus Pharm Chemistry VETERINARY MEDICINE Bone, Jesse Franklin 1950 Prof Emeritus Veterinary Medicine Dickinson, Ernest M. 1927 Prof Emeritus Veterinary Medicine Wedman, E. Edward 1971 Prof Emeritus Veterinary Medicine ADMINISTRATIVE, RESEARCH, & SERVICE UNITS Bailey, Samuel Hall 1947 Prof Emeritus Dept of Information Boice, Charles Allan 1966 Prof Emeritus Dept of Information Boots, Donald S. 1977 Director Emeritus Student Health Center Bowers, Waldo 1963 Assoc Prof Emeritus, Assoc Director Emeritus Admissions Bryan, M. Edward 1972 Assoc Prof & Director Emeritus of Student Housing & Residence Programs Bucy, David Alvin 1956 Prof Emeritus & Emeritus Director of Facilities Planning Burns, Nedry Valentine 1968 Asst Prof Emeritus Business Affairs Castle, Emery N. 1954 Prof & Chair Emeritus University Graduate Faculty of Economics Dunn, James Wesley 1963 Prof Emeritus Development Office Durham, Marvin Lyle 1970 Assoc Prof Emeritus Int'l Education Edwards, Louis Laird 1955 Director Emeritus Career, Planning & Placement, Assoc Prof Business Admin Fitzgerald, Duane Stanley 1952 Asst Prof Emeritus Memorial Union Foulke, Ted E. 1969 Prof Emeritus Student Health Center Gates, Dillard Herbert 1962 Prof Emeritus Int'l Research & Development Gibbs, Wallace Eugene 1958 Director Emeritus of Admissions, Registrar Emeritus Giffin, John S. 1980 Prof Emeritus Student Health Center Graham, Crawford Henderson 1961 Director Emeritus Alumni Relations & Assoc Prof Emeritus Harris, Irwin Cecil 1945 Director Emeritus Student Publications, Prof Emeritus Journalism Jeffrey, Hugh Frank, Jr. 1950 Prof Emeritus (Director of Business Affairs) Johnson, Wallace Earle 1956 Prof Emeritus & Director Emeritus of Information Lillig, Everett Houston 1970 Director Emeritus Physical Plant Morray, Marjorie Kuh 1968 Asst Prof Emeritus English Language Institute McBride, Marjorie 1966 Assoc Prof Emeritus Career, Planning, & Placement Metzger, Stuart Miles 1962 Assoc Director Emeritus Facilities Planning & Assoc Prof Emeritus Architecture Munford, James Kenneth 1939-46, 1948 Director Emeritus Publications & OSU Press, Prof Emeritus Education Pahre, Richard E. 1956, Director Emeritus Financial Aid Poling, Dan Williams 1937 Prof Emeritus, Dean Emeritus of Men Purvis, Benjamin Percy 1964 Assoc Prof Emeritus Communication Media Ctr Shaw, Clayton Albert 1950-53, 1966 Asst Prof Emeritus (Asst Registrar) Stephan, William Pershing 1968 Prof Emeritus Student Health Center Stevens, George F. 1973 Director Emeritus Memorial Union & Educational Activities Valenti, Paul Bartholomew 1949 Prof Emeritus Intercollegiate Athletics Van Vliet, Antone Cornelis 1955 Director Emeritus Career, Planning, & Placement Center Waldron, Rodney King 1954 Director Emeritus of Libraries, Prof Emeritus Watson, John Lowe 1947 Controller Emeritus, Prof Emeritus OSSHE Yates, Thomas Leyba 1963 Prof Emeritus Computer Center FACULTY The date following the name indicates the year of first appointment to the OSU Faculty. More than one date indicates that there has been a break in service. This Faculty Roster includes the Oregon State University faculty who serve the University, its students, and constituents through one or more of the following activities: instruction, research, extension, and administration. Also listed are a few on-campus staff members with faculty appointments in other state system agencies. The names of courtesy faculty members, individuals who provide voluntary services to the instructional and research programs of the University, appear in the faculty listings of individual departments or colleges. The following abbreviations are used: ProfProfessor; Assoc Prof-Associate Professor; Asst Prof-Assistant Professor; Instr-Instructor; Res Assoc-Research Associate; Sr Instr-Senior Instructor; Sr Faculty Res Asst-Senior Faculty Research Assistant; Faculty Res Asst-Faculty Research Assistant; Extn-Oregon State University Extension Service. Abbott, Mark R. 1988 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS UC-Berkeley 1974; PhD UC-Davis 1978 Abels, Maya 1988 Director Corporate & Foundation Relations Development Office. BS Wisconsin 1971, MS 1980 Abraham, Michael 1990 Asst Women's Basketball Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BA St Mary's 1984 Abrassart, Arthur Eugene 1966 Assoc Prof Finance & Int'l Business. BSME Illinois Institute of Technology 1963; MA Illinois 1964, PhD 1967 Acker, David George 1985 Assoc Director & Asst Prof Int'l Research & Development. BA Wilmington College 1975; MS UC-Davis 1980; PhD Oregon State 1989 Acker, Steven A. 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Forest Science. BS Oregon 1982; PhD Wisconsin-Madison 1988 Ackerman, Jayne A. 1991 Director & Physician Student Health Center. BA Carolina-Greensboro 1959; MA Wisconsin-Madison 1964; MD Vermont College of Medicine 1976 Acock, Alan C. 1990 Dept Head & Prof Human Development & Family Sciences. BA East Washington 1966; MA Washington State 1968, PhD 1971 Adams, David Gordon 1972 Prof North Willamette Exp Station. BS Michigan State 1959, MS 1962; PhD Oregon State 1966 Adams, Jennifer G. 1988 Asst Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS Furman 1976; DVM Georgia 1985 Adams, Paul William 1980 Assoc Prof Forest Engineering, Extn Watershed Mgmt. Specialist. BS Vermont 1975; MS Michigan 1978, PhD 1980 Adams, Richard Melvin 1981 Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BS UC-Davis 1968, MS 1971, PhD 1975 Adams, Wesley Thomas 1978 Assoc Prof Forest Genetics. BS Humboldt State College 1968; MS North Carolina State-Raleigh 1970; PhD UC-Davis 1974 Faculty Adduci, Virginia B. 1990 Instr & Field Study Coordinator Human Development & Family Sciences. BS Iowa State 1975; MS Oregon State 1989 Adkison, Mark A. 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Microbiology. BS UC-Davis 1982, MS 1986, PhD 1991 Anderson, Sonia R. 1968 Prof Biochemistry & Azarenko, Anita Nina 1986 Assoc Prof Biophysics. BS Nebraska 1961; PhD Illinois 1964 Horticulture. BS Maryland 1981, MS 1983, PhD Anderson, Wayne C. 1986 Assoc Prof English. BA Gonzaga 1977; MA Washington 1979, PhD 1982 Andreasen Jr., James R. 1990 Asst Prof Veterinary Medicine. BA Utah 1968; MA Texas 1973; BS Texas A & M 1980, DVM 1981; MS Georgia 1987, PhD Ahearn, Kerry David 1976 Assoc Prof English. BA Stanford 1967; MA Ohio 1968, PhD 1974 Ahrendt, Kenneth Martin 1971 Assoc Prof Andreasen, Claire B. 1990 Asst Prof Veterinary Education. BA Arizona State 1959, MA 1962; EdD British Columbia 1969 Medicine. BS Texas A & M 1979, BS 1981, DVM 1982; MS Georgia 1987, PhD 1990 PhD Oregon State 1986 Aldrich, Jane V. 1987 Asst Prof Pharmacy. BS Michigan State 1976; PhD Michigan 1983 Aldrich-Markham, Susan 1984 Assoc Prof Yamhill Co Extn. BS Pomona College 1969; BS Oregon State 1973, MA 1978 Alexander, Gerald Corwin 1955 Assoc Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. BS Oregon State 1951; ScM MIT 1959, PhD UC-Berkeley 1973 AliNiazee, Mohammed Taskeen 1972 Prof Entomology. BScAgric AP Ag (Hyderabad, India) 1966; PhD Cal-Riverside 1970 Allen, John Sharer, Jr. 1973 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BSE Princeton 1959, PhD 1968 Allen, Nancy L. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Oregon State 1985 Allen, Nancy M. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BS Oregon State 1990 Allison, Dona Clare 1986 Instr Marion Co Extn. BA Fresno State College 1958 Altman, Stephen R. 1991 Men's Golf Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oregon State 1990 Amano, Matthew M. 1967 Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BA Meiji Gakuin (Japan) 1959; MBA UCLA 1962, PhD 1966 Amberg, John W, Jr. 1967 Sr Faculty Res Asst Laboratory Animal Resources. BS Oregon State 1967 Amort, Donald Louis 1959 Assoc Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. BS Oregon State 1954, MS 1960 An, Haejung 1991 Asst Prof Food Science & Technology. BS Seoul National Univ (Korea) 1981; MS Louisiana State 1984; PhD Florida 1989 Anderson, Amy E. 1991 Asst Prof Zoology. BA UCBerkeley 1970; PhD UC-Santa Barbara 1989 Anderson, Craig Hedges 1980 Sr Instr Coordinator of Television Production, Communication Media 1982 1990 Ahrens, Glenn Robert 1988 Faculty Res Asst Forest Andrews, Janet S. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Center for Service. BS Humbolt State 1982; MS Oregon State Gene Research. BA Univ of San Diego 1985; MS UC1990 Riverside 1987, PhD 1990 Aitken, Sally N. 1990 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Forest Andrews, Kit 1992 Instr & Coordinator Center for Science. B.S.F. Univ of British Columbia 1984; MS Writing & Learning. BA UC-Santa Cruz 1977; MA UC-Berkeley 1986, PhD 1989 Oregon 1987, PhD 1992 Akyeampong, Ataa Asham 1986 Asst Prof, Counselor & Instructional Coordinator Educational Opportunities. BA Washington 1969, MSW 1972; 1987. Azevedo, Robert Steven 1982 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State Arbogast, Brian L. 1974 Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BA Southern Oregon 1974 Arbogast, Daniel N. 1985 Sr Faculty Res Asst Food Science & Technology. BS Colorado State 1979 Armstrong, Donald James 1974 Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. AB Marshall 1959, MA 1961; PhD Wisconsin 1967 Arnold, Jerry W. 1991 Asst Prof Animal Sciences. BS Kansas State 1979; MS Georgia 1988, PhD 1991 Arnold, Roy G. 1987 Provost & Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs, Prof Food Science & Technology. BS Nebraska 1962; MS Oregon State 1965, PhD 1967 Arp, Daniel James 1990 Prof Botany & Plant Pathology/Director Nitrogen Fixation Lab. BS Nebraska 1976; PhD Wisconsin-Madison 1980 Arrington, Julie 1988 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oklahoma State 1980. Arthur, Jeffrey Lee 1977 Assoc Prof Statistics. BS Purdue 1973, MS 1975, PhD 1977 Arthur, John Read 1983 Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering, Chemistry. BS Iowa State 1954, PhD 1961 Asbell, Ann Cecile 1984 Instr Exercise & Sport Science. BS Missouri 1974; MS Indiana 1979 Ashkenas, Linda R. 1979 Sr Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BA Cornell 1976; MS Boston 1979 Atkinson, Mary 1987 Asst Prof Yamhill Co Extn. BS Washington 1979, MS 1985 Atkinson, William A. 1982 Prof Forest Engineering. BS UC-Berkeley 1955, MS 1956, PhD 1974 Aune, Darrell 1989 Coord Broadcast Operations Intercollegiate Athletics. BA Washington State 1965 Anne, Patricia Elaine 1989 Assoc Prof Multnomah Co Extn. BS North Dakota State 1970; MS Arizona 1979 Austin, Edward L. 1991 Asst Prof Naval Science. BFA Colorado 1985 Averill, Jane E. 1990 Instr English Language Institute. BA Kansas 1974; MA San Francisco State Center. BA San Jose State 1978 1980 Anderson, James Edward 1964 Head Men's Aylworth, Charles E. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Forest Basketball Coach, Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oregon State 1959, MEd 1962 Anderson, Norman Herbert 1962 Prof Entomology. BSA (Honors) British Columbia 1955; MS Oregon State 1958; Diploma Imperial College (London) 1961, PhD 1961 Resources. BA Oregon 1965; MA U of Louisville 1970, PhD 1975 Ayres, James W. 1970 Prof Pharmacy. BS Idaho State 1965; PhD Kansas 1970 Ayres, William Alan 1972 Sr Faculty Res Asst Computing Services. BS Seattle University 1968; MS Oregon State 1973 Bachelor, Gilbert Arthur 1961 Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BA Eastern Washington 1953; MS Oregon State 1955 Back, Dae-Hyun 1991 Asst Prof Economics. BA Seoul National Univ (Korea) 1981; MA Ohio State 1986, PhD 1990 Baertlein, Dawn A. 1989 Res Assoc Horticulture. BS Arizona 1981, MS 1984, PhD 1988 Baggett, James Ronald 1956 Prof Horticulture. BS Idaho 1952; PhD Oregon State 1956 Baggott John B. 1984 Asst Prof Washington Co Extn. BS Michigan State 1975, MS 1980 Baham, John Eustis 1979 Assoc Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Sonoma State, 1975; PhD UC-Riverside 1980 Bahr, Frederick L. 1986 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Washington 1986 Bailes, Jack Clayton 1972 Prof Acctg & Info Mgmt. AB Stanford 1968; MBA Columbia 1970; PhD Washington 1973 Bailey, George Samuel, Jr. 1979 Prof Food Science & Technology, Director Marine Freshwater Biomedical Center. BS USC 1965; PhD UC-Berkeley 1969 Bailey, Libby M. 1988 Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BS Oregon State 1986, MS 1988 Baisted, Derek John 1964 Prof Biochemistry & Biophysics. BSc Exeter (England) 1957, PhD 1960 Bakalinsky, Alan T. 1989 Asst Prof Food Science & Technology. BS UC-Davis 1979, MS 1983, PhD 1989 Baker, Robert Steven 1969 Asst Prof & Systems Analyst, Kerr Library. BS Oregon State 1964, MS 1972 Baker, Warren Stannard 1980 Asst Prof, Extn Energy Specialist. BA Illinois 1964; PhD Edinburgh 1976 Balakrishnan, Revathi 1987 Assoc Prof, Director of Women in Int'l Development. BS Madras 1965; MS Ohio State 1967, PhD 1981 Baldwin, Barbara E. 1965 Faculty Res Asst Western Rural Development Center (Editor). BA Evansville 1959 Baldwin, Edith E. 1991 Instr Education. BEd La Trobe Univ (Australia) 1976; MS Wisconsin-Stout 1982; PhD Oregon State 1985 Ball, Daniel A. 1990 Asst Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Kansas State 1976; MS UC-Riverside 1980; PhD Wyoming 1988 Ballantine, Charles S. 1960 Prof Mathematics. BS Washington 1953; PhD Stanford 1959 Balz, Barbara S. 1990 Registrar. BA Alabama 1965; MS Indiana 1967 Bandhauer, Michele L. 1992 Instr Acctg & Info Mgmt. BS Colorado State 1983, MS 1986 Banducci, Susan A. 1992 Instr Political Science. BS Santa Clara Univ 1988; MA UC-Santa Barbara 1989 Barabe, James 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Massachusetts 1990 316 Faculty Barbour, James E 1965 Sr Faculty Res Asst Food Science & Technology. BA Linfield 1962 Barbour, Philip L. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Mechanical Engineering. BS Oregon State 1985, MS 1991 Barbour, Richmond Tyler 1992 Asst Prof English. BA Stanford 1970; PhD UC-Berkeley 1990 Barksdale, Brett 1988 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Harvey Mudd 1988 Barnes, David W. 1984 Prof Biochemistry & Biophysics. BA Vanderbilt 1971, PhD 1977 Barnes, Jeffrey 1984 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Iowa State 1975; MS Cal Tech 1977; PhD Washington 1983 Barnes, Natalie S. 1992 Alumni Advocate/Program Leader - Alumni Relations. BS Oregon State 1981 Barnes, Robert Kent 1969 Asst Director & Assoc Prof Office of Budgets & Planning. BA Oregon 1964; MA Portland State 1970 Barnhill, Jean Anne 1980 Faculty Res Asst Food Science & Technology. BS Oregon State 1966 Barnum, James Michael 1990 Faculty Res Asst Malheur Exp Station. BS Cal State-Chico 1969 Barofsky, Douglas Fred 1984 Prof Ag Chemistry. BS Washington State 1963; MS Penn State 1965, PhD 1967 Barofsky, Elisabeth 1985 Sr Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BS Chemie Schule Richter (Germany) 1964 Barstow, Dennis Alan 1964 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1964 Barth, John Alexander 1987 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Colorado 1982; PhD MIT-Woods Hole 1987 Bartlett, Jill 1992 Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BS Oregon State 1992 Barton, Roxane K. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Eastern Oregon Ag Res Center- Squaw Butte. BS Montana State 1987; MS U of Nevada-Reno 1987 Basham, Eric J. 1992 Faculty Res Asst (Acting) Microbiology. Bates, Allison C. 1973 Instr Veterinary Medicine. BS Oregon State 1974 Baughman, Dale Thomas 1989 Director of Intercollegiate Athletics. BA Ohio State 1971, MS 1976 Baxter, Wade W. 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Biochemistry & Biophysics. BA Carleton College 1987; MS Northwestern Univ 1988, PhD 1992 Bayne, Christopher Jeffrey 1971 Prof Zoology. BS Wales 1963, PhD 1967 Beach, Gary L. 1988 Institutional Research Coordinator, Budgets & Planning. BS Portland State 1972; MS Oregon State 1982 Beach, Reg 1990 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Univ of Miami 1982; MS Washington 1986 Beachley, Michael L. 1976 Asst Prof, Athletic's Compliance Officer Intercollegiate Athletics. BA San Francisco State 1970, MA 1971; PhD Denver 1976 Beals, Eric Lee 1978 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA San Francisco State 1978 Beals, Kenneth Louis 1970 Prof Anthropology. BA Oklahoma 1965, MA 1967; PhD Colorado 1971 Beasley, Sarah E. 1989 Instr & Reference Librarian, Kerr Library. BA Goshen College 1984; MILS Michigan 1989 Beatty, Bess 1986 Assoc Prof History. BA Wake Forest 1970; MA Florida State 1973, PhD 1976 Beatty, Joseph John 1979 Sr Instr Biology Program. BS Missouri at Columbia 1970, MA 1973; PhD Oregon State 1979 Beck, William E 1982 Instr Industrial & Mfg Engineering. BA Wyoming 1960; MS Arizona State 1967; MBA Oregon State 1989 Becker, Boris William 1970 Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BS UC-Berkeley 1962, MBA 1967, PhD 1970 Beckley, Beverley 1990 Director of Donor Relations Development Office Beebe, Maria A. 1991 Asst Prof Extn Specialist, Natural Resources Int'l Program. BA Columban College (Philippines) 1967; MA Stanford 1979, PhD 1992 Beekman, George E. 1980 Sr Instr Computer Science Engineering. BA Missouri 1969; MS Oregon 1972 Beilstein, Michael 1978 Sr Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BA Oregon State 1973 Bell, Christopher A. 1981 Assoc Prof Civil Engineering. BS Nottingham (England) 1972, PhD 1978 Bell, Neil C. 1992 Faculty Res Asst North Willamette Res/Ext. Center. BS Univ of British Columbia 1990; MS Oregon State 1992 Bell, Thomas E 1985 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS Haverford 1972; MS Oregon State 1982 Bella, David Andrew 1967 Prof Civil Engineering. BS Virginia Military Institute 1961; MS New York 1964, PhD 1967 Benage, Wendy L. 1991 Asst Athletic Trainer Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oregon 1985, MS 1987 Bender, Randall C. 1983 Faculty Res Asst Zoology. BS Texas Tech 1977 Bennett, Andrew Fawcett 1987 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BSc Western Australia 1967; MS Harvard 1968, PhD 1971 Bennett, Carol Lea 1989 Staff Chair & Asst Prof Morrow County Extn. BS Cal Poly-San Louis Obispo 1962, MS 1985 Bennett, Cleon Vernon 1958 Dept Chair & Prof Speech Communication. BS Murray State 1955; MA Southern Illinois 1959; PhD Wisconsin 1971 Bennett, Erik J. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Ext Admin. BS Oregon State 1990 Bentley, Tracy Leigh 1990 Instr & Director of Svc for Disabled Students. BS, BA New Mexico 1987 Berg, Helen M. 1974 Director Survey Research Center, Asst Prof Statistics. BA Wisconsin 1953; MS Oregon State 1973 Bergstrom, Robert Russel 1991 Asst Prof Ext Commercial Energy Specialist. BS Arizona State 1961; MS Stanford 1972 Berkman, Hilary E. 1988 Faculty Res Asst Int'l Research & Development. BS Wisconsin-Madison 1980 Bernieri, Frank John 1988 Asst Prof Psychology. BA Rochester 1983; PhD Harvard 1988 Berry, Helen 1988 Assoc Prof Marion Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1975; MS Indiana State 1979 Berry, Ralph Eugene 1968 Prof Entomology. BS Colorado State 1963, MS 1965; PhD Kansas State 1968 Beschta, Robert Lee 1974 Prof Forest Hydrology. BS Colorado State 1965; MS Utah State 1967; PhD Arizona 1974 Bettinger, Peter S. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Forest Eng Res. BS Virginia Polytech Inst 1987, MS 1989 Beauchamp, Robert O. 1991 Instr Apparel, Interiors, Housing & Merchandising. BA UCBerkeley 1957 Bianco, Theresa M. 1990 Asst Prof Pharmacy. BS SUNY-Buffalo 1984; Pharm.D. Texas at Austin & the Health Sciences Center at San Antonio 1988 Bibles, Brent D. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Utah State 1987 Bierlmaier, Frederick A. 1977 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS Vermont 1974 Biermann, Christopher James 1987 Asst Prof Forest Products. BS Maine-Orono 1980; PhD Mississippi State 1983 Bilsland, Douglas M. 1980 Faculty Res Asst Bioresource Engineering. BS Oregon State 1975 Binney, Stephen Ellis 1973 Prof Nuclear Engineering. BS Oregon State 1964; MS UCBerkeley 1966, PhD 1970 Birkes, David Spencer 1974 Assoc Prof Statistics. BS Stanford 1964; MS Chicago 1966; PhD Washington 1969; MS Oregon State 1972 Bishop, Donald L. 1990 Asst Prof Military Science. BS Sam Houston State 1982 Bishop, Janell K. 1988 Faculty Res Asst Microbiology. BS Oregon State 1985 Bishop, Leslie J. 1988 Instr English Language Institute. BS Missouri 1963; MEd Oregon State 1987 Bishop, Norman Ivan 1963 Prof Plant Physiology. BS Utah 1951, MS 1952, PhD 1955 Biswell, Brian L. 1991 Faculty Res AsstFisheries & Wildlife. BS Washington 1982 Bjergo, Karl K. 1989 Asst Crew Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. Bjornson, Rebecca Marie 1989 Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BA Johns Hopkins 1986; MS UC-San Diego 1989 Blaustein, Andrew R. 1978 Prof Zoology. BA Southampton College 1971; MS U of Nevada-Reno 1973; PhD Cal-Santa Barbara 1978 Blazevich, Carol 1990 Asst for Promotions and Marketing Intercollegiate Athletics. BA Washington State 1988 Block, John H. 1978 Prof Pharmacy. BS BPhr Washington State 1961, MS 1963; PhD Wisconsin 1966 Bloomfield, Molly M. 1992 High School Coordinator - SMILE Program. BA Wellesley 1966; MA Stanford 1967 Bloomfield, Stefan David 1971 Prof Finance & Int'l Business. BES Johns Hopkins 1966; MS Stanford 1968, PhD 1972 Blythe, Linda L. 1978 Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS UC-Davis 1972, DVM 1974, PhD 1979 Bodenroeder, Pamela K. 1969 Sr Faculty Res Asst Survey Research Center. BA Oregon State 1969 Bodyfelt, Floyd Walter 1964 Prof Food Science & Technology, Extn Dairy Processing Specialist. BS Oregon State 1963, MS 1967 Boe, Alan Bryzn 1986 Faculty Res Asst Extn Energy Program. BA Oregon 1970 Boehm, Constance S. 1992 Project Director NIRSA. BS Manchester College 1980; MA Ball State 1981 Boersma, Larry 1960 Prof Crop & Soil Science. MS The Netherlands 1955; PhD Cornell 1959 Faculty Boes, Teresa K. 1990 Res Assoc Forest Science. BS Ohio State 1981; MS Kansas State 1985; PhD Nebraska 1989 Braker, Marjorie 1979 Assoc Prof/Washington Co Staff Chair (Interim). BS Wisconsin-Stout 1967; BS Wisconsin-River Falls 1970; MS Wisconsin-Stout Bogley, William A. 1990 Asst Prof Mathematics. BA 1978 Dartmouth 1981; MS Oregon 1983, PhD 1987 Bohle, Mylen G. 1989 Asst Prof Crook Co Extn. BS Montana State 1975, 1979; MS Oregon State 1989 Bokay, Kevin P. 1991 Instr Military Science. BA U of Maryland-Vicenza Italy 1984 Boileau, Arlene Fay 1986 Instr Jefferson Co Extn. Bolte, John P. 1987 Asst Prof Bioresource Engineering. BS Florida 1979, MS 1983; PhD Auburn 1987 Bondi, Michael Charles 1978 Assoc Prof Clackamas Co Extn. BS Iowa State 1973; MS Canterbury (New Zealand) 1977 Bonnichsen, Robson 1991 Director of Center for the Study of First Americans & Prof of Anthropology. BA Idaho State 1965; PhD Univ of Alberta 1974 Bootland, Linda M. 1990 Res Assoc Microbiology. BS Univ of Guelph (Canada) 1982, PhD 1990 Boquist, Debra J. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Horticulture. BS Oregon State 1984 Borchers, Jeffrey G. 1990 Res Assoc Forest Science. BS Cal State-Long Beach 1972; BA Humboldt State 1980; MS Yale 1982; PhD Oregon State 1990 Borg, Marcus J. 1979 OSU Distinguished Professor Philosophy. BA Concordia College 1964; Diploma Oxford 1966, PhD 1972 Borgir, Tharald 1967 Prof Music. MM Yale 1960; PhD UC-Berkeley 1971 Bose, Bella 1980 Prof Computer Science Engineering. BE Madras 1973; ME Indian Institute of Science 1975; MS Southern Methodist 1979, PhD Branch, Harrison 1972 Prof Art. BFA San Francisco Art Institute 1970; MFA Yale 1972 1980 Bottero, Joseph Moshe 1969 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. ES Portland State 1962; MS Oregon State 1969 Bottomley, Peter J. 1979 Prof Microbiology. BS Liverpool (England) 1972; PhD Dundee (Scotland) 1975 Boucot, Arthur James 1969 OSU Distinguished Professor, Zoology. BA Harvard 1948, MS 1949, PhD 1953 Bowers, John Edward 1972 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BSEE Illinois 1970 Bowker, Judith K. 1991 Asst Prof Speech Communication. BS Kansas, MA 1973; PhD Oregon Brandt, Jeanette Ann 1973 Assoc Prof Apparel, Interiors, Housing, & Merchandising. BS Washington State 1967; MS Oregon State 1972, PhD 1981 Brandt, Jeanne Dawn 1985 Assoc Prof Home Ec Extn. BS Oregon State 1982; EdM 1984 Brandt, Karen L. 1988 Asst Prof Crook Co Ext. BS Oregon State 1966; MS 1991 Brandyberry, Kelly 1991 Faculty Res Asst Eastern Oregon Ag Res Center- Squaw Butte. BS Kansas State 1990 Brass, Jane L. 1992 WRDC Program Coordinator. BA Dartmouth 1982; MS Cornell 1987; MS Florida State 1991 Brauner, David Ray 1977 Assoc Prof Anthropology. BA Washington State 1969, MA 1972, PhD 1976 Braunworth, William S. Jr. 1986 Asst Prof Ag. Program Leader (Interim) Extn Agriculture. BS Colorado State 1975; MS 1977; PhD Oregon State 1986 Brazee, Edward Brooks 1964 Assoc Prof & Social Science & Humanities Librarian, Kerr Library. BA Oregon 1962; MLS Washington 1963; MA Oregon 1973 Brazier, Allan A. 1992 Inst Education. BEd & BA U of Saskatoon (Canada) 1970; MEd Oregon 1989 Breen, Patrick Joseph 1974 Dept Head (Interim) & Prof Horticulture. BS College of St Thomas 1960; MS Minnesota 1963, PhD 1967 Brennan, William James 1966 Asst Dean of Students, Assoc Prof Education. BS Oregon State 1962, MEd 1966 Brett, Marcia Ann 1982 Sr Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BA Michigan 1968; BS Oregon State 1982 Brewster, Bill Densmore 1975 Sr Instr Crop & Soil Science. BS Oregon State 1970, MS 1972 Brimmer, Timothy R. 1989 Music Education Coordinator & Asst Prof Music. BME Central Mich 1980; MME Northern Mich 1982; DMA Ball State 1989 Iowa State 1962; MF Yale 1963, PhI) 1967 Brings, Stanley D. 1987 Instr Industrial & Mfg Engineering. BS Oregon State 1986, MEd 1987 Briskey, Ernest Joseph 1979 Prof Animal Sciences/Food Science & Technology, Senior Adviser Int'l Program Development Africa & Mid-East. BS Wisconsin 1952; MS Ohio State 1955; PhD Wisconsin 1958 Boynton, Linda L. 1989 Asst Prof Apparel, Broadbent, Bernice P. 1991 Recruiter/Counselor Interiors, Housing & Merchandising. BA Cal StateChico 1970, MA 1981; MA UC-Davis 1988 Bozanich, Patricia A. 1992 Ext. Master Recycle Program Coordinator. BS Portland State 1981 Bozarth, Connie S. 1991 Res Assoc Ag Chemistry. BS Missouri 1978; MS Washington State 1981, PhD Health Careers Opportunity Program. BS Cal StateFresno 1987 1989 Boyd, Jeffrey A. 1990 Diversity Coordinator Memorial Union. BS Oregon State :1987 Boyle, James Reid 1981 Prof Forest Resources. BS 1984 Bradford, Charles S. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Biochemistry & Biophysics. BA Delaware 1980, MS 1983 Brady-Glassman, Patti 1988 Asst to the Director & Adviser Financial Aid. BS Delaware 1982; MEd Oregon State 1989 Brock, Paul Lewis 1989 Instr Military Science Broderick, David Joseph 1977 Faculty Res Asst Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS New Hampshire 1965, MS 1967; PhD Oregon State 1977 Broderick, William Payson 1986 Asst Prof & Morrow County Extn Agent. BS Cal St-Fresno 1969; MA Norwich Univ 1992 Brodie, Ann E. 1975 Faculty Res Asst Animal Sciences. BS Purdue 1965; PhD UC-Berkeley 1970 Brodie, John Douglas 1975 Prof Forest Resources. BFS Toronto 1961; MS Syracuse 1963; PhD UCBerkeley 1971 317 Brook, David M. 1987 Instr Multnomah Co Extn. BA Southern Illinois 1968 Brookhyser, Evelyn Anne 1966 Staff Chair & Prof Lincoln Co Extn. BS Stout State 1966; EdM Oregon State 1974 Broome, Janice Marie 1978 Asst Prof Multnomah Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1976; MPA Portland State 1986 Brophy, Laura S. 1986 Sr Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Carleton College 1979; MS Minnesota 1985 Brose, Elizabeth Louise 1982 Exec VP Jackman Foundation. BS Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo 1972 Brouwers, Marlette 1985 Counselor & Asst Prof, Counseling Center. BA Colorado 1975; MA Washington State 1984, PhD 1985 Brown, Bonnie 1982 Director (Acting) Family Business Program. BA Grinnell College 1969; MA Kansas 1971, PhD 1976; MBA Oregon State 1991 Brown, Carol E. 1978 Assoc Prof Acct & Info Mgmt. BS Wisconsin 1972; MS Oregon 1977; PhD Oregon State 1989 Brown, Clinton 1970 Prof Art. BFA WisconsinMilwaukee 1965; MA Wyoming 1966; MFA USC 1968 Brown, Daniel J. 1974 Assoc Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BA Washington 1966; MBA Fresno State 1969; PhD Iowa 1974 Brown, George Wallace 1966 Dean of College of Forestry, Director Forest Research Laboratory, Prof Forestry. BS Colorado State 1960, MS 1962; PhD Oregon State 1967 Brown, Lyle R. 1970 Prof Microbiology. BA Willamette 1963; PhD Tulane 1968 Brown, Marda Kay 1973 Faculty Res Asst Biochemistry & Biophysics. BA Willamette 1963 Brown, Perry Joe 1979 Assoc Dean Forestry, Prof Forest Resources, Director Int Forestry Programs. BS Utah State 1967, MS 1968, PhD 1971 Brown, Terence Daniel 1975 Prof Forest Products, Extn Forest Products Specialist. BS Colorado State 1970; BS Utah 1971; PhD Colorado State 1975 Browne, Beverly 1984 Asst Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BA Washington 1961, MAIS Oregon State 1979, PhD Oregon 1985 Browne, William Griest 1968 Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BSSE Case Institute of Technology 1960; MBA Washington 1965; PhD Michigan 1968 Brownell, Philip Harry 1979 Assoc Prof Zoology. BA UC-Berkeley 1969; PhD UC-Riverside 1976 Bruce, Robert K. 1989 Director Communications and University Relations. BA Northern Illinois 1967; MA Central Michigan 1972, EdS 1974 Brunner, Charles Calvin 1984 Assoc Prof Forest Products. BS Portland State 1968, MBA 1979, PhD 1984 Bryan, Joyce 1987 Instr English Language Institute. BA Ohio 1970; EdM Oregon State 1983 Bryant, Nancy Owens 1974 Assoc Prof Apparel, Interiors, Housing, & Merchandising. BA Washington 1968; MS Minnesota 1974 Bubl, Charles Edward 1978 Staff Chair & Assoc Prof Columbia Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1973, MS 1978 Buccola, Steven Thomas 1980 Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BA Saint Mary's College of California 1966; MS UC-Davis 1972, PhD 1976 Buchal, Michael A. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Marine Branch Station. BA Reed College 1989 318 Faculty Buchanan, Jack 1985 Physician Student Health Center. MD Illinois Central 1979 Buckhouse, John Chapple 1975 Prof Rangeland Resources. BS UC-Davis 1966; MS Utah State 1968, PhD 1975 Bucy, David Edward Morelock 1984 Instr Forest Resources. BS Oregon State 1977, MS 1980 Budd, Timothy Alan 1986 Assoc Prof Computer Science Engineering. BA Western Washington State Butler, Judy Ann 1978 Sr Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BS Oregon State 1969 Butler, Marvin D. 1991 Asst Prof Jefferson Co Extn. BA Pacific Union College 1971, MA 1972; MS Utah State 1984 Byrne, John Vincent 1960, 1984 President Oregon State University, Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. AB Hamilton College 1951; MA Columbia 1953; PhD USC 1957 1976; MS Yale 1978; PhD 1980 Buermeyer, Karl R. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Forest N Science Res. BS Davis & Elkins College 1980; MS Idaho 1983 Buhler, Donald Raymond 1967 Prof Ag Chemistry. BS Oregon State 1950, MS 1953, PhD 1956 Bunderson, Pamela E. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Int'l Research & Development. BS Utah State 1977 Bunting, Robert 1993 Instr History. BS Eastern Oregon State College 1969; MA Wichita State Univ 1971; PhD UC-Davis 1992 Burger, E. Dorsey 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BA College of William & Mary 1983; MA Clark Univ 1988 Burgett, Dennis Michael 1974 Prof Entomology. BS Edinboro State 1966; MS Cornell 1971, PhD 1973 Burhanuddin, Sheikh 1989 Asst Prof Industrial & Mfg Engineering. MS Manitoba 1980; MSE West Virginia 1983, PhD 1988 Burke, Mary E. 1985 Sr Instr Prof Microbiology. BA Blackburn College 1964; MS Iowa State 1966, PhD 1969 Burke, Michael John 1984 Prof Horticulture, Assoc Dean College of Ag Sciences. BA Blackburn College 1964; PhD Iowa State 1969 Burke, Susan J. 1992 Instr Home Economics Child Development Lab. BS Oregon State 1983 Bumett, Margaret M. 1992 Asst Prof Comp Science Engineering. BA Miama Univ (Ohio) 1970; MS Kansas 1981, PhD 1991 Bums, Leslie Davis 1985 Prof Apparel, Interiors, Housing, & Merchandising. BA Washington State 1978; PhD Purdue 1981 Burridge, Judith A. 1960, 1971 Chair & Prof Linn Co Ext. BS Oregon State 1960, MS 1971, PhD Oregon 1985 Burrill, Larry Clyde 1962 Assoc Prof Extn Weeds Specialist. BS Oregon State 1959, MS 1973 Burt, John Grinnel 1973 Assoc Prof Marion Co Extn. BS Cal-Davis 1969; MS Ariz 1972 Burt, Lawrence Andrews 1979 Assoc Prof Extn Ag Resource Economist. BS Cal Poly-Pomona 1973; MA Washington State 1976, PhD 1979 Burton, Robert M., Jr. 1977 Prof Mathematics. BA Washington 1972; PhD Stanford 1977 Busch, Betty J. 1992 Asst Prof Music. BME Northern Colorado 1981; MM Ohio State 1987. Bushnell, Dwight J. 1976 Assoc Prof Mechanical Engineering. BS Utah 1967, MS 1968; PhD Brigham Young 1974 Busler, Susan Lee 1987 Asst Prof Lincoln Co Extn. BS Kent State 1983; MPA Seattle 1986 Butcher, Karyle Sue 1981 Asst University Librarian for Research & Public Services & Assoc Prof, Kerr Library. BA UC-Berkeley 1964; MS USC 1965 Butler, David Allen 1975 Prof Statistics. BS Oregon State 1969; MS Cornell 1970; MS Stanford 1975, PhD 1975 Cahn, Helen 1990 Faculty Res Asst North Willamette Res & Extn Center. BA Colorado College 1982; MS Colorado State 1989 Calder, Clarence Andrew 1978 Assoc Prof Mechanical Engineering. BSME Oregon State 1960; MS Brigham Young 1962; PhD UC-Berkeley 1969 Caldwell, Bruce A. 1978 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS Oregon State 1974, MS 1978 Caldwell, Douglas Ray 1968 Dean & Prof College of Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Chicago 1955, BS 1957, MS 1958, PhD 1963 Caldwell, Valerie J. 1990 Faculty Res Asst Pharmacy. DVM Texas A&M 1989 Calvert, Janet Kathryn 1985 Asst Prof, Lane Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1958, MS 1965 Calvert, Leonard J. 1961-65 1969 Assoc Prof Communication Specialist, Ag Communications. BA Oregon 1955, MA 1976 Camacho, Rodolfo A. 1991 Asst Prof Finance & Int'l Business. BA UC-Santa Barbara 1980; MBA Pennsylvania; JD Univ of Santa Clara 1982 Campbell, Allan 1111976 Staff Chair (Interim) & Assoc Prof Jackson Co. BS Massachusetts 1958; MS Oregon State 1973 Campbell, Courtney S. 1990 Asst Prof Philosophy. BA Yale Univ 1981; MA Virginia 1984, PhD 1988 Campbell, Donald T. 1988 Assoc Prof (Sr Res) Pharmacy. BA Colorado College 1968; PhD Washington 1974 Campbell, Elizabeth Anne 1984 Assoc Prof English. BA Tennessee 1967; MA Virginia 1978, PhD 1983 Campbell, John Robert 1989 Instr English. BA Northern Illinois Univ 1981; MFA Oregon 1988 Campbell, Larry T. 1990 Asst Prof Clackamas Co Extn. BS Cal Poly-Pomona 1973; MS MissouriColumbia 1979 Canfield, Marilyn Loree 1979 Sr Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BA Cal State-Fullerton 1964, MA 1967 Cannon, Caroline Helena 1959-67 1972 Prof Multnomah Co Extn. BA St. Olaf College 1959; MS Pacific Lutheran 1973 Canty, Bridget A. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Lewis & Clark 1991 Cape, Judith E. 1992 Instr English. BA Cal StateLong Beach 1968; MA Humboldt State 1982 Cappaert, Marlys R. 1988 Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Oregon State 1982, MS 1987 Caputo, John A. Instr/Ext Seed Cert Specialist. BS Idaho 1980; MS Oregon State 1985 Carbonell-Moore, Maria Consuelo 1987 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Tadeo Lozano (Colombia) 1978; MS Oregon State 1985 Carlson, Angela Ruth 1969 Senior Instr Music. BA Idaho 1964; MM Wisconsin 1965 Carlson, David John 1983 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Augustana College 1973; PhD Maine 1981 Carlson, Judith C. 1991 Director of DevelopmentThundering Seas Institute. BS Wisconsin 1959; MA Oregon State 1978 Carlson, Lisa J. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science Res. BA Macalester College 1987; MS Virginia 1991 Carlson, Marlan 1969 Dept Chair & Assoc Prof Music. BME Kansas 1959, BM 1959; MM Eastman School of Music 1961, DMA 1964 Carpenter, Charles E 1972 Prof Education. BS Ft. Hays State College 1952; MA Colorado 1959; PhD Texas 1969 Carr, Jay B. 1979 Assoc Prof Baker Co Extn. BS Missouri 1972, MS 1973 Carr, Mark H. 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Zoology. BA UC-Santa Cruz 1976; MA San Francisco State 1983; PhD UC-Santa Barbara 1991 Carr, Mary-Elena 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. PhD Dalhousie University 1991 Carroll, Carleton Warren 1974 Assoc Prof French. BA Ohio State 1961; MA Wisconsin 1965, PhD 1968 Carrol, Diane J. 1991 Asst Prof Animal Sciences. BA Edinboro State College 1970; MS Maine 1986; PhD Wisconsin-Madison 1991 Carson, Mina Julia 1989 Assoc Prof History. BA Harvard-Radcliffe 1975; AM Harvard 1979, PhD 1984 Carson, Ward William 1992 Assoc Prof (Sr Res) Forest Resources. BS Oregon State 1960; MS Illinois 1964; PhD Washington 1973 Carter, Cheri Jo 1973 Asst Prof Wallowa/Union Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1971, MEd 1980 Carter, W. Gibson 1980 Assoc Prof Multnomah Co Extn. BF Stephen E Austin State 1953; MS George Washington 1967; MS Rhode Island 1971 Cary, Stephen Craig 1992 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Microbiology. BS Florida Inst of Technology 1976; MS San Diego State 1981; PhD Scripps 1989 Castagnoli, Steven P. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Horticulture. BA UC-Santa Cruz 1981; MS UC-Davis 1988 Caswell-Reno, Prudence A. 1990 Faculty Res Asst Microbiology. BS Maine 1972, MS 1985 Catranis, Catharine M. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Forest Products. BS State U of New York 1982, MS 1986 Caughey, Carol Conlee 1990 Asst Prof Apparel, Interiors, Housing & Merchandising. BA Mills College 1966, MA Cal State-Hayward 1967 Cerklewski, Florian Lee 1979 Assoc Prof Nutrition & Food Mgmt. BS Penn State 1971; PhD Illinois 1976 Chamberlain, David Jack 1980 Staff Chair & Assoc Prof Harney Co Extn. BS Idaho 1968, MS 1973 Chamberlin, Martha J. 1990 Instr Computer Science Engineering. BS Utah 1981; MS Oregon State 1990 Chambers, Carol L. 1988 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS Kentucky 1979, MS 1988 Chambers, M. Jean 1992 Asst Prof Nutrition & Food Mgmt. BS Washington State 1961; MS Michigan State 1969; PhD Ohio State 1975 Faculty Chao, Chi-Chur 1990 Asst Prof Economics. BC National Chenchi Univ (China); MA National Taiwan Univ 1978; PhD Southern Illinois Univ 1987 Chappell, Berkley 1963 Prof Art.13FA Colorado 1956, MFA 1958 Charles, Walter 1989 Asst Prof Psychology. BA Long Island Univ 1983; MA Princeton 1985, PhD 1988 Chastain, Thomas G. 1989 Asst Prof Crop & Soil Science, Columbia Basin Ag Res Center. BA Cal State-Chico 1981; MS Oregon State 1985, PhD 1987 Cheeke, Peter Robert 1969 Prof Animal Sciences. BSA Univ of British Columbia 1963, MSA 1965; PhD Oregon State 1969 Chelton, Dudley Boyd 1983 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Colorado 1974; PhD California 1980 Chen, Chaur Fong 1991 Asst Prof Bioresource Engineering. BS National Taiwan Univ (China) 1978; MS Oregon State 1988, PhD 1992 Chen, Fuqiang 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Crop & Soil Science. BS Fujian Agriculture College 1982, MS 1985; PhD Oregon State 1991 Chen, Jian-Lu 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Pharmacy. MS Zhongshan Univ, PRC 1985; PhD Hawaii 1991 Chen, Lung-Kee 1986 Assoc Prof Mathematics. BS National Taiwan 1977; MS Chicago 1981, PhD 1986 Chen, Paul M. 1978 Prof Horticulture MidColumbia Ag Res & Ext Center. MS North Dakota State 1971; MS Minnesota 1973, PhD 1976 Chen, Tony Hwei-Hwant 1986 Assoc Prof Horticulture. BS National Taiwan 1974; MS Minnesota 1979, PhD 1981 Chen, Tse-Fang Susan 1984 Res Assoc Ag Chemistry. BS Fu Jen U (Taiwan) 1979; MS UC-San Diego 1982, PhD 1985 Chen, Yongshun (John) 1991 Asst Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Univ of Sci & Tech (China) 1982; MS Princeton 1985, PhD 1989 Cheng, I-Fan 1989 Asst Prof History. BA Tunghai (Taiwan) 1971; MA UC-Berkeley 1973, PhD 1988 Chesley, Marie M. 1986 Assoc Prof Speech Communication. BA Valparaiso 1957; BS UC-Davis 1980; MA Stanford 1963 Chi, Chunhuei 1990 Asst Prof Public Health. BS China Medical College 1978; MPH Texas 1982; ScD Harvard 1990 Clark, Beverly Jeanne 1985 Sr Instr Crop & Soil Science. BS Montana State 1978; BS Washington State 1985 1979, MSc 1982 Clark, Peter U. 1988 Asst Prof Geosciences. BS St. Lawrence 1978; MS Waterloo 1980; PhD Colorado Coblentz, Bruce Evan 1975 Prof Fisheries & 1984 Clarke, Ronald Orville 1963 Prof Philosophy. BS Oregon State 1950; BD Yale 1953; ThD Pacific School of Religion 1964 Clarke, Sharon 1990 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS Fitchburg State College 1979; MS Oregon State 1987 Clauson, Milo L. 1986 Sr Faculty Res Asst Forest Products. BA Eastern Oregon State College 1969 Claussen, Dale D. 1990 Instr Public Health Mobile Program Specialist. BA Oregon State 1988, BS 1988 Claycomb, Peter T. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BS Oregon State 1987, MS 1990 Cleary, Brian Dennis 1970 Assoc Prof Forest Science. BS Oregon State 1965, MS 1966, PhD 1970 Clepper, Lisa L. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BA Texas-Austin 1985; MS Boise State 1991 Chovanec, Stephen F. 1990 Asst Prof Art. BFA Clinton, Richard Lee 1976 Prof Political Science. Virginia Commonwealth Univ 1976, MFA 1986 Christensen, J. Mark 1986 Assoc Prof Pharmacy. BS Utah 1975, PhD 1980 Christensen, Neil Walter 1978 Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Nevada 1966; MS New Mexico State 1968; PhD Oregon State 1972 Christie, Alison Anne 1989 Asst Prof & Reference Librarian, Kerr Library. BS Melbourne (Australia) 1972, MS 1976; MLS Hawaii 1982 Christie, David M. 1988 Asst Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BSc Australian Nat'l 1969; MSc LaTrobe (Australia) 1978; PhD Hawaii 1984 Chua, Boon 1989 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1987, MS BA Vanderbilt 1960, MA 1964; PhD North Carolina 1990 Ciuffetti, Lynda Marie 1989 Asst Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Massachusetts 1973; MS Michigan Tech 1976; PhD Purdue 1983 Coates-Markle, Linda Joan 1986 Director Horse Center & Sr Instr Animal Sciences. BSc Guelph 1971 Cloughesy, Michael Joseph Jr. 1987 Assoc Prof & Lane Co Extn Agent. BS Iowa State 1978; MF Oregon State 1983 Clugston, David A. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BA Macaleiter College 1974; MS Hawaii Wildlife. BS Fairleigh Dickinson 1967; MWM Michigan 1969, PhD 1974 Coggins, Margi L. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BA Holyoake College 1988; MA Michigan State 1991 Cole, Elizabeth Carol 1983 Sr Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS Utah State 1981, MS 1984 Cole, Richard Lee 1977 Prof & Program Director Ag Education. BS Oregon State 1966, MEd 1973; PhD Iowa State 1977 Coleman, Gary D. 1990 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Horticulture. BS Colorado 1978, MS 1986; PhD Nebraska-Lincoln 1989 Collier, Mary Jane 1989 Assoc Prof Speech Communication. BA Colorado 1975; MA USC 1979, PhD 1982 Collier, Patricia Ann 1981 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BFA Boston 1977; MEd Northeastern 1980 Collier, Robert William 1981, 1984 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS MIT 1974; MS Cal Tech 1975; PhD MIT-Woods Hole Oceanographic Inst 1981 Collins, Rachel Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS North Carolina State 1989 Collison, Brooke B. 1989 Assoc Prof Education. BS Kansas 1956, MEd 1961; PhD Missouri-Columbia 1978 1969 Cluskey, Steven Allen 1989 Faculty Res Asst Conard, Roberta Lee 1976 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Oregon State Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Southern Illinois 1974; MS West Virginia 1989 Coakley, James A. Jr. 1988 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS UCLA 1968; MA UCBerkeley 1970, PhD 1972 Coakley, James R. 1990 Asst Prof Acct & Info Mgmt. BS Oregon State 1970; MBA Utah 1976, PhD 1982 Coakley, Stella Melugin 1988 Dept Head & Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BS UC-Davis 1969, MS 1970, PhD 1973 1973, MS 1976 Cone, Martha Carol 1978 Res Assoc Chemistry. BA Texas 1969, PhD 1972 Conklin, Frank Sidney 1968 Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BS Oregon State 1954; MS Iowa State 1959, PhD 1968 Conner, Helen Dwelle 1963 Prof Malheur Co Extn. BS Montana 1963 320 Faculty Conrad, Diana Kay 1970 Director & Assoc Prof Admissions. BS Idaho 1959; MEd W Washington 1970 Conrady, Michael R. 1980 Faculty Res Asst Radiation Center. BS Oregon State 1973 Constantine, George H. 1980 Prof Pharmacy BS Utah 1960, MS 1962; PhD Oregon State 1966 Conte, Frank Philip 1961 Prof Zoology. AB UCBerkeley 1950, PhD 1961 Conroy, Judith A. 1987 Instr Pharmacy. BS Oregon State 1975 Conway, Flaxen D.L. 1989 Asst Prof Extension. BS Oregon State 1984, MS 1987 Conway, James Patrick 1988 Head Coach Men's Soccer Intercollegiate Athletics Cook, Curtis Roger 1970 Prof Computer Science Engineering. BA Augustana College 1965; MS Iowa 1967, PhD 1970 Cook, Gordon Henry 1965 Assoc Prof Union Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1964, MS 1974 Cook, Ronald Lawrence 1977 Asst Prof Crop & Soil Science, Extn Certification Asst. BS Oregon State 1975, MS 1979 Cook, Thomas William 1977 Assoc Prof Horticulture. BS Washington State 1972; MS Rhode Island 1975 Coolen, Michael Theodore 1978 Assoc Prof Music. BA Seattle 1969; MA Washington 1972, PhD 1979 Cooley, Fielding Edwards 1990 Asst Prof Extension Service. BS Tennessee 1967; MS Oregon 1985, PhD 1988 Coop, Leonard Bryan 1987 Res Assoc Entomology. BA Baker 1979; MS Oregon State 1982, PhD 1987 Cooper, Alan Scott 1991 Sr Faculty Res Asst Extn Entomology. BS Oregon State 1979, MS 1985 Cooperstein, Jerry 1993 Instr Physics. BS SUNYStony Brook, NY 1972, MS 1980, PhD 1982 Cope, Thomas C. 1990 Instr English Language Institute. BA Oregon State 1981; MA Ohio and Denver 1989 Copek, Peter Joseph 1972 Director Center for Humanities, Assoc Prof English. BS Loyola (Chicago) 1967; MA Northwestern 1969, PhD 1973 Corbett, Miel R. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BA Mills College 1991 Corcoran, Patrick E. 1987 Instr Ag & Resource Economics. BS Wisconsin-Eau Claire 1984; MS Oregon State 1987 Cordell, Sharon M. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Radiation Center. BS Georgia State 1989 Cordray, Sheila Mary 1982 Asst Prof Sociology. BA Cal Poly-Pomona 1976; MS Oregon 1978, PhD 1982 Cordy, Clifford B. 1111991 Res Assoc Statistics. BA Southern Oregon State 1982; MS Oregon State 1984; PhD UC-Santa Barbara 1988 Corey, Ann Elizabeth 1979 Sr Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BS Oregon State 1978 Cornelius, James Conley 1979 Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BS UC-Davis 1970; MS Wyoming 1972; PhD Washington State 1977 Corwin, Michael David 1981 Asst Athletic Director Intercollegiate Athletics. BA San Francisco State 1977 Costa, Marliene A. 1988 Director of Minority Affairs & Special Programs Graduate School. AB UCBerkeley 1954; MAIS Oregon State 1987 Courtney, E. Wayne 1972 Prof Education. BSF Purdue 1953, BS 1957, MS 1958, PhD 1962 Couture, Randy D. 1992 Asst Wrestling Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. Covey, Steven L. 1969 Faculty Res Asst Sea Grant. BS Oregon State 1960 Cowan, Hal Everett 1976 Asst Athletic DirectorSports Information, Asst Prof Intercollegiate Athletics. BA Linfield 1964 Cowles, Timothy James 1984 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Stanford 1973, MA 1973; PhD Duke 1977 Cox, Douglas W. 1992 Instr Military Science Crabtree, Garvin Dudley 1958 Prof Horticulture. BS Oregon State 1951; MS Cornell 1955, PhD 1958 Craig, A. Morrie 1977 Prof Veterinary Medicine. BA Oregon State 1965, PhD 1970 Craig, Beverly Ann 1987 Asst Prof & Staff Chair Home Economics/4-H Youth. BS Eastern Illinois 1969, MS in Ed 1983 Craig, Richard P. 1974 Assoc Director & Assoc Prof Extension Service. BBA Woodbury 1960; MS Western Oregon 1980 Crane, Jimmie Merle 1992 Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BS Idaho 1965 Crawford, Cameron Allen 1988 Asst Prof Military Science. BS US Military Academy 1978 Crawford, John Arthur 1974 Assoc Prof Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Creighton 1968; MS Nebraska 1971; PhD Texas Tech 1974 Creech, Harold Clayton 1967 1971 Sr Faculty Res Asst Marine Science Center. BS Oregon State 1965, MS 1967 Crisman, Russell Owen 1979 Assoc Prof Veterinary Medicine. DVM Purdue 1970; PhD Georgia 1979, Dipl ACT Crisp Lloyd Earle 1972 Prof Speech Communication. BA San Francisco State 1958, MA 1960; PhD Denver 1967 Croft, Brian A. 1982 Prof Entomology. BS Brigham Young 1966, MS 1968; PhD Cal-Riverside 1970 Cromack, Kermit, Jr. 1974 Assoc Prof Forest Science. BA Texas 1963, MA 1967; PhD Georgia 1973 Crook, Richard V. 1974 Team Physician Intercollegiate Athletics. AB Pennsylvania 1960; MD Harvard 1965 Cross, Timothy Lee 1983 Asst Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BS Oklahoma State 1980, MS 1982; PhD OSU 1992. Crowe, Frederick James 1984 Assoc Prof Plant Pathology, Superintendent Central Oregon Ag Experiment Station. BA Stanford 1971; MS UCDavis 1975, PhD 1978 Crowl, Lawrence A. 1991 Asst Prof Computer Science Engineering. BS Denison Univ 1981; MS Virginia Polytechnic 1983; PhD Univ of Rochester 1991 Cruse, Donna F. 1970 Assoc Prof Psychology. BS Colorado State 1965; MS Massachusetts 1967, PhD 1970 Cuenca, Richard H. 1978 Prof Bioresource Engineering. BS Cal State Polytechnic 1971; MS Cal State-Sacramento 1975; PhD UC-Davis 1978 Cull, Paul 1970 Prof Computer Science Engineering. BS Providence College 1965; PhD Chicago 1970 Currans, Kevin Garrett 1982 Faculty Res Asst Entomology. BS Oregon State 1981 Currens, Kenneth Paul 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Oregon State 1983, MS 1987 Curtis, Lawrence R. 1980 Prof Fisheries & Wildlife. BS South Alabama 1974, MSc 1977; PhD Mississippi Medical Center 1980 Cusack, Thomas J. 1984 Asst Prof Int'l Research & Development. BS London 1970; MS Guelph (Canada) 1972; PhD Oregon State 1977 Cusimano, Barbara Ewens 1988 Asst Prof Exercise & Sport Science. BS Oklalhoma State 1970; MS Arizona State 1975, PhD 1981 Cutler, Patricia 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Oregon State 1988 0 D'Ambrosio, Bruce Douglas 1986 Assoc Prof Computer Science Engineering. BS UC-Berkeley 1979, MS 1984, PhD 1986 Daeschel, Mark A. 1988 Assoc Prof Food Science & Technology. BA SUNY Plattsburgh 1977; MS Tennessee Knoxville 1979; PhD North Carolina State-Raleigh 1983 Dahlhoff, Elizabeth P. 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Zoology. BA UC-Santa Cruz 1986; PhD UC-San Diego 1992 Dale, Robert D. 1965 Assoc Prof Philosophy. BS Oregon State 1957; MA Chicago 1959; PhD UCBerkeley 1973 Daley, Bryon 1993 Faculty Res Asst Zoology. BS Oregon State 1991 Daley, Laurence Stephen 1983 Assoc Prof Horticulture. BS Florida 1964, MS 1966; PhD UCDavis 1975 Dalton, Clifford Sherman 1971 Director of Library Development-Kerr Library. BS Oregon State 1966, MBA 1969 Dane, Charles Wesley 1957 Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BSFE Oregon State 1952, MS 1958; Registered Professional Engineer 1960; DBA Indiana 1968 Daniels, Malcolm 1965 Prof Chemistry(Radiation Center): BSc Kings College, Durham (England) 1951, PhD 1955 Daniels, Rachelle E. 1991 Asst Director, Counselor, Academic Coordinator Upward Bound. BA Oregon State 1991 Daniels, Richard Jacob 1970 Assoc Prof English. BA Ohio State 1964, MA 1966, PhD 1972 Daniels, Steven E. 1989 Asst Prof Forest Resources. BS Whitman College 1981; MS Duke 1984, PhD 1986 Danielson, Harold Rodger 1968 Sr Instr Crop & Soil Science. BA Montana State 1961; MS Oregon State 1973 Dantas-Whitney, Maria E. 1990 Instr English Language Institute. BA Santa Ursula 1984; MA Northern Arizona 1987 Dark, Cathy 1991 lnstr Exercise & Sport Science. BS Oregon; MA Laban Centre for Movement & Dance 1988 Darnell, Thomas J. 1978 Assoc Prof Umatilla Co Extn. BS Kansas State 1967, MS 1969 Dascanio, John J. 1991 Asst Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS Pennsylvania State 1983; DVM Pennsylvania 1988; Dipl ABVP-EP Dascanio, Linda M. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BS SUNY-Cortland 1991 Faculty Daugherty, Tracy Don 1986 Asst Prof English. BA Southern Methodist 1976, MA 1983; PhD Houston 1985 Davenport, Sally A. 1990 Asst Prof Political Science. BA Stanford 1963; MA UCLA 1968; PhD John Hopkins Univ 1983 Davis, Dwain L. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Forest Resources. BS Washington 1961 Davis, Joel 1963 Assoc Prof Mathematics. BA Princeton 1957; MS Wisconsin 1960, PhD 1966 Davis, Lawrence E. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS UC-Davis 1988 Davis, Lorin Richard 1969 Prof Mechanical Engineering. BA Brigham Young 1958, BESME 1959; MSME Purdue 1961; PhD Illinois 1964 Davis, Steven Lewis 1983 Prof Animal Sciences. BS Idaho 1964, MS 1966; PhD Illinois 1969 Davis-Butts, Eda 1989 Instr Ed Opp Program. BS Georgia 1974 Daw, Sonya 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BA UC-Santa Cruz 1989 Dawson, Peter Sanford 1969 Prof Zoology. BS Washington State 1960; PhD UC-Berkeley 1964 Day, Paul Edward 1972 Assoc Prof Lane/Benton Co Extn & Int'l Research & Development. BS Oregon State 1964, MS 1971 De Stefano, Stephen 1991 Res Assoc Fisheries & Wildlife. MS Wisconsin 1982; PhD Idaho 1989 De Young, Bruce Richard 1988 Ext Sea Grant Frog Leader, Assoc Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BA Augustana 1974; MS Oregon State 1976; PhD Union Graduate School 1986 Deagen, John T. 1970 Sr Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BS San Francisco 1969; MS Oregon State 1972 Dealy, Glen Caudill 1967 Prof Political Science. BA Washington 1957; MA George Washington 1958; PhD UC-Berkeley 1965 DeAngelis, Jack Douglas 1988 Asst Prof Extn Entomologist. BA Miami (Ohio) 1976; MS New Mexico State 1978; PhD Oregon State 1981 DeBevoise, Anne E. 1986 Res Assoc Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Stanford 1974; MS UCSanta Barbara 1983, PhD 1985 Deboodt, Timothy Lee 1987 Chair & Asst Prof, Crook Co Extn. BS Oregon State; MS Wyoming 1984 DeFrancesco, Joseph Thomas 1986 Sr Faculty Res Asst North Willamette Research & Extn Center. BS Oregon State 1977, MS 1987 Deinzer, Max Ludwig 1973 Prof Ag Chemistry, Chemistry. BS Rutgers 1960; MS Arizona 1963; PhD Oregon 1969 DeKock, Carroll Wayne 1967 Dept Chair & Prof Chemistry. BS Calvin College 1960; PhD Iowa State 1965 DeLander, Gary E. 1990 Assoc Prof Pharmacy. BS Colorado 1977; PhD Minnesota 1983 DelCurto, Timothy 1989 Asst Prof Animal Sciences. BS Oregon State 1984, MS 1986; PhD Kansas State 1989 DeSzoeke, Roland Andreas 1973 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. MSc New South Wales 1972; PhD Nova 1973 Delson, Irma 1990 Int'l Student Adviser & Int'l Exchange Coordinator. BA Eastern Oregon State College 1984 Demaio, Ruth S. 1991 Cultural & Conversant Coordinator English Language Institute. BA Stanford 1970; MAIS Tulane Univ 1974 Denison, William Clark 1966 Assoc Prof Botany & Plant Pathology, Curator of Mycological Herbarium. AB Oberlin College 1950, AM 1952; PhD Cornell 1956 Denning, Diane L. 1992 Academic Advisor College 321 of Business. BS Oregon State 1991, MBA 1992 Denoma, John 1992 Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BS Montana State 1970, MS 1990 Dodrill, Steven Jeffrey 1990 Asst Prof Electronic Media Spec Ag Communications. BA Montana 1984; MS Oregon 1990 Doerksen, Allan H. 1964 Sr Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS Oregon State 1962, MS 1964 Doescher, Paul Steven 1984 Assoc Prof Rangeland Resources. BS Illinois 1975; MS Montana 1977; PhD Oregon State 1983 Doescher, Susan M. 1984-1990; 1992 Asst Prof Extension Child Dev Specialist. BS Purdue 1975; MA Michigan State 1979; PhD Oregon State 1986 Derryberry, Douglas A. 1984 Assoc Prof Donaldson, Laurie 1986 Instr English Language Psychology. BA Oregon 1978, MS 1981, PhD 1983 Institute. BA Utah 1974, MA 1976 Donatelle, Rebecca 1984 Assoc Prof Public Health. BS Wisconsin-LaCrosse 1972, MS 1979; PhD Oregon 1981 Donel, John Ray 1989 Instr & Reference Librarian, Kerr Library. BS Pennsylvania-Bloomsburg 1979; Desiderio, Russell A. 1987 Res Assoc Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Cal Tech 1975; PhD Stanford 1984 Dewitt, Lynn M. 1983 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Humboldt State 1978; MS Oregon State 1981 Deyo, Laurie Carpenter 1988 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS SUNY Oswego 1982; PhD Michigan State 1988 Dezzani, Brian M. 1992 Instr Health & Human Performance, Asst Director Intramural Sports. BS UC-Davis 1986; MS Purdue 1988 Dibble, Terence L. 1986 Sr Faculty Res Asst Civil Engineering. BSEE Oregon State 1969, MSCE 1981 Dick, Richard P. 1985 Assoc Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Minnesota 1974; MS Louisiana State 1977; PhD Iowa State 1985 Dick, Thomas P. 1986 Asst Prof Mathematics. BA, BS Kansas 1978; MA Brandeis 1979; PhD New Hampshire 1984 Dickenson, Stephen E. 1992 Asst Prof Civil Engineering. BA UC-Berkeley 1985; MSCE Virginia Polytechnic Inst & State U 1988; PhD UC-Berkeley 1992 Dickerson, Bodil 1981 Sr Instr Finance & Int'l Business. BS Oregon State 1980, MBA 1984 Dickinson, Charles E. 1992 Clinical Fellow Veterinary Medicine. BS Gannon Univ 1980; DVM Colorado 1988 Dickson, Robert L. 1981 Faculty Res Asst Animal Sciences. BS Idaho 1978 Dietterich, Thomas G. 1985 Assoc Prof Computer Science Engineering. AB Oberlin College 1977; MS Illinois 1979; PhD Stanford 1984 DiGiulio, James Anthony 1984 Faculty Res Asst Entomology. BS Michigan 1973; MS Texas 1983 Di Julio, Nadine 1991 Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BS San Diego State 1989. Dilles, John H. 1989 Asst Prof Geosciences. BS Calif Inst Tech 1975, MS 1976; PhD Stanford 1984 Dillon, Michael P. 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Chemistry. BS Univ of Leicester (England) 1988; PhD Universities of Leicester & Bristol 1991. Dillon, Thomas M. 1977 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Sacramento State 1969; MA UC-Davis 1971, PhD 1974 Dilson, Wolfgang Otto 1970 Assoc Prof German. BA UC-Riverside 1968; PhD UC-Davis 1972 Dix, Russell Grover 1964 Assoc Prof, Assoc Registrar. BS Oregon State 1962, MF 1964 Dixon, Alfred Ray 1970 Sr Faculty Res Asst Horticulture. BS Oregon State 1966, 1984 Dodd, Brian 1978 Prof Nuclear Engineering, Radiation Health Physics. BS London 1969, PhD 1973 MLS SUNY-Albany 1989 1983 Assoc Prof Horticulture. PhD UC-Davis 1974 Dougherty, William G. 1987 Prof Microbiology. BA Rutgers 1974; MS Florida 1976, PhD 1979 Douglass, James Marlin 1968 Director of Bands, Prof Music. BME Denver 1960; MFA Ohio 1962 Doss, Robert Paul Douthit, Peggy 1988 Coordinator Instr Outdoor Recreation Center. BS Oregon 1986, MS 1988 Dovel, Randy L. 1987 Asst Prof, Research Agronomist, Klamath Exp Station. BS Abilene Christian College 1981; MS Texas A & M 1983, PhD 1987 Dowling, Barbara Tolley 1978 Instr English Language Institute. BA Ohio 1971, MA 197 Dowling, Thomas 1982 Instr Mgmt & Marketing. BA Ohio 1973; MS Univ of Pittsburgh 1978 Drake, Charles Whitney 1966 Prof Physics. BS Maine 1950; MA Wesleyan (Connecticut) 1952; PhD Yale 1958 Drapek, Raymond James 1985 Faculty Res Asst Entomology. BS Michigan 1981; MS Michigan State 1985 Drapela, Patricia May 1981 Assoc Athletic Director/Student Athlete Svcs Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oregon 1961 Dray, Tevian 1988 Assoc Prof Mathematics. BS MIT 1976; MA UC-Berkeley 1977, PhD 1981 Dreher, Theo Wolfgang 1987 Assoc Prof Ag Chemistry. BAgr Melbourne (Australia) 1976, PhD 1980 Drexler, John Anthony Jr. 1983 Assoc Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BA Wayne State 1968, MA 1971; PhD Michigan 1975 Driscoll, Debra Minar 1984 Ext Agent Home Ec. BS Mankato State 1975; MS Wisconsin-Stout 1982 Drobnic, Karl S. 1974 Instr EnglishLanguage Institute. BA Ohio 1965 Du, Shi-Hua 1990 Faculty Res Asst Nutrition & Food Mgmt. Nankai Univ, (China) 1962 Duddles, Ralph Edward 1988 Ext Forester. BS Mich Tech 1962; MS Wash 1963 Dudek, Nan 1982 Instr Educational Opportunities. BS Long Island Univ, Southampton 1979 Dugan, Vickie 1988 Softball Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BA Fort Hays State 1975; MS OT Utah State 1980 Duimstra, Julie R. 1988 Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BS South Dakota State 1980, MS 1987 N Faculty Duncan, James Andrew 1979 Coordinator Print Media & Assoc Prof, Ag Communications. BA Central Arkansas 1969; MA Oregon 1975 Duncan, Robert Ames 1977 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. AB Princeton 1971; MS Stanford 1972; PhD Australian National 1976 Dungan, Diane G. 1985 Adviser Career Planning & Placement Center. BS Oregon State 1981, MEd 1989 Dunham, Daniel 1983 Director Office of Continuing Higher Education. BS Oregon State 1962, MS 1963, EdD 1970 Dunn, Barbara 1986 Asst to the Director & Instr, Financial Aid. BA Alaska 1973; MEd Oregon State 1984 Dunn, John Maximillian 1975 Associate Provost for Academic Affairs, Prof Exercise & Sport Science. BS Northern Illinois 1967, MS 1969; EdD Brigham Young 1972 Dunnington, Leslie Garner 1969 Asst Director & Assoc Prof Counseling Center. BME Central Missouri State 1958, MS 1961; PhD Wyoming 1966 Dunsdon, David 1981 Instr Acctg & Info Mgmt. BA Pacific 1969; MBA Central Michigan 1979 Durand, Lucia Relf 1976 Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BA Stanford 1954; BA Oregon State 1973; MS Wisconsin 1957 Durst, Bob 1984 Sr Faculty Res Asst Food Science & Technology. BS Cal Tech 1974; MS Oregon State 1988 Dutchuk, Michael Scott 1986 Faculty Res Asst Food Science & Techology. BS Oregon State 1979 Dutson, Thayne R. 1987 Prof Assoc Dean Ag Sciences & Director Ag Exp Station. BS Utah State 1966; MS Michigan State 1969, PhD 1971 Dyck, Harry M. Jr. 1992 Captain & Prof Naval Science. BS Cal State-Fresno 1964; MS Naval Postgraduate School 1975 Dymond, Jack R. 1969 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Miami (Ohio) 1961; PhD UC-San Diego 1966 Easley, Patricia J. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Water Resources. BA Calif State U 1989, MA 1991 Easter, Mark 1990 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS Purdue Univ 1982 Ebbeck, Vicki 1990 Asst Prof Exercise & Sport Science. BEd C.T.C. Australia 1984; MS Oregon 1986, PhD 1990 Eberhart, Joyce Louise 1989 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science Res. BA Wisconsin 1978 Eddleman, Lee Elbert 1981 Prof Rangeland Resources. BS Colorado State 1960, MS 1962, PhD 1967 Ede, Lisa S. 1980 Director Center for Writing & Learning, Prof English. BS Ohio State 1969, PhD 1975; MA Wisconsin 1970 Edge, William Daniel 1989 Asst Prof Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Montana 1979, MS 1982, PhD 1985 Edmonston, George P. Jr. 1986 Instr & Editor The State 1971; MA SW Oregon Stater. BA Louisiana Louisiana 1975 Edwards, William C. 1990 Director Memorial Union & Educational Activities. BS SUNY Oswego 1965; MS Oklahoma State 1967; MBA Missouri 1981; PhD South Dakota 1990 Egbert, Gary 1988 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA UC-Berkeley 1977; MS Washington 1981, PhD 1987 Egna, Hillary S 1986 Faculty Res Asst Int'l Research & Development. BS Michigan State 1980; MS Oregon State 1985 Ehrensing, Daryl 1981 Sr Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BS Oregon State 1976 Eiseman, David 1968 Prof Music. AB UC-Berkeley 1963; MM Illinois 1964, PhD 1972 Eisgruber, Ludwig Maria 1973 Prof Ag & Resource Economics. Dipl Agr Tech Univ of Munich 1955; MS Purdue 1957, PhD 1959 Ek, Michael B. 1988 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1980, 1987, MS 1982 Eldin, Neil N. 1992 Assoc Prof Civil Engineering. BS Cairo Univ (Egypt) 1972; MS Concordia Univ (Canada) 1978; MS McGill Univ (Canada) 1979; PhD Oklahoma State 1987 Elefritz, Mark Alan 1990 Asst Prof Clatsop Co Extn. BS Wash 1979; MA Western Seminary 1989 Eleveld, Bartelt 1984 Assoc Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BS Cal Poly 1972; MA Washington State 1974; PhD Texas A & M 1979 Ellingson, Anne Marie 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Oregon State 1992 Ellingson, Lisa J. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1985 Ellis, Theresa J. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Food Science & Technology. BS Oregon 1988 Elwood, Norman Eugene 1979 Assoc Prof, Extn Forest Resources Specialist. BS Michigan State 1969; MS Minnesota 1978, PhD 1984 Emami, Ali 1984 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Ag & Resource Economics. BS Natl Iran 1972; MS Oregon 1980; PhD Oregon State 1987 Emigh, David 1982 Head Crew Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BA Washington State 1973, MS 1979 Emmingham, William H. 1980 Assoc Prof, Extn Silviculture Specialist, Forest Science. BS Idaho 1961; MS Oregon State 1972, PhD 1974 Endres, David A. 1992 Asst Athletic Director- Fundraising & Development Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oregon State 1982 Engel, Harold N. 1979 Assoc Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS Missouri 1969, DVM 1969; MS Auburn 1974; PhD Iowa State 1979 Engel, Joanne B. 1990 Assoc Prof Education. BS Penn State 1965; MEd Univ of Sydney (Australia) 1972; MS Iowa State 1978, PhD 1979 English, Marshall Joseph 1978 Prof Bioresource Engineering. BS San Jose State 1965; MS UCBerkeley 1974, PhD 1978 Ensign, Scott A. 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Brigham Young 1986; PhD Wisconsin-Madison 1991 Entry, James 1990 Res Assoc Forest Science. BS Montana 1979, BA 1981; MS Idaho 1984; PhD Oregon State 1989 Erickson, Dianne K. 1988 Asst Prof Science & Math Education. BS Minnesota 1966; MA Northwestern 1969; PhD Oregon 1986 Erickson, Linda 1979 Assoc Prof Clackamas Co Extn Agent. BA Marshall 1961, MEd Maryland 1971 Ervin, David 1991 Dept Head & Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BS Ohio State 1967, MS 1969; PhD Oregon State 1974 Esbensen, Steven K. 1977 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA UCLA 1968, MS 1972, PhD 1976 Eskelsen, Valerie 1990 Faculty Res Asst Forest Products. BS Brigham Young 1987; MS Oregon State Ethington, Robert L. 1987 Prof Forest Products. BS Iowa State 1957, MS 1958, PhD 1963 Eubank, Lawrence Gray 1990 Instr Speech Communication. BS Oregon State 1984; MFS Oregon 1987 Evans, Danny 1990 Asst Women's Basketball Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oregon State 1988 Evans, Glenn Thomas 1977 Prof Chemistry. BS Seton Hall 1968; PhD Brown 1973 Evans, Gwil Owen 1966 Director Communications & Planning, College of Ag Sciences. BS Oregon State 1961; AM Stanford 1962 Faculty 323 Evans, Leigh J. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Marine Science Center. BS Lafayette College 1982; MS San Diego State 1985 Ferngren, Gary Burt 1970 Prof History. BA Western Washington 1964; MA British Columbia 1967, PhD Flaherty, Francis Joseph 1967 Dept Chair & Prof Mathematics. BS Wisconsin 1956; MS Notre Dame 1973 Evans, Thomas Parker 1968 Prof Education. BA Transylvania 1957; MS Kentucky 1964; PhD Ohio Ferrigno, Daniel Patrick 1987 Asst Football Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BA San Francisco State 1959; PhD UC-Berkeley 1965 Flahive, Mary E. 1990 Assoc Prof Mathematics. BA St. Joseph College 1969; MS Ohio State 1971, PhD State 1968 1975 1976 Evey, John M. 1988 Director of Development. BS Oregon State 1971; MS Oregon 1976 Fertitta, Russell A. 1989 Instr Aerospace Studies. BA Regis College 1985; MA Webster Univ 1991 Evey, Loralei S. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BA UC-Santa Cruz 1990 Fetch, Deborah Ann 1987 Instr & Asst Head Catalog Librarian, Ken Library. AB Illinois 1979, MS Fleischbein, Jane Helen 1982 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1975; BA Western Washington 1981 Fletcher, Richard Allan 1979 Assoc Prof Benton/Linn Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1975, MBA 1987 Fichter, Becky Lou 1984 Res Assoc Entomology. BS Iowa State 1968; PhD Oregon State 1984 Fichter, Eugene Frank 1977 Assoc Prof Industrial & Facteau, Timothy Joseph 1967 Prof Mid-Columbia Mfg Engineering. BME Rensselaer Polytechnic Ag Research & Extension Center. BS Rutgers 1963, Institute 1967; MS New Brunswick 1973; PhD MS 1965; PhD Florida 1967 Monash 1977 Fairchild, Clifford Eugene 1962 Prof Physics. BA Fiebert, Erik 1990 Faculty Res Asst Malheur Exp Fresno State 1956; PhD Washington 1962 Station. BS Univ Sao Paulo 1980; MA UC-Santa Falkner, Kelly Kenison 1992 Asst Prof Oceanic & Cruz 1988 Atmospheric Sciences. BA Reed College 1983; PhD Fiegener, Mark K. 1990 Asst Prof Mgmt & MIT/Woods Hold 1989 Marketing. BA UC-Santa Barbara 1977; MBA Farber, Paul Lawrence 1970 Dept Chair & Prof Washington 1983; PhD Pennsylvania 1990 History. BS Pittsburgh 1965; MA Indiana 1968, PhD Field, Cyrus West 1963 Dept Chair of Geosciences 1970 & Prof Geology. BA Dartmouth 1956; MS Yale 1957, Farber, Vreneli Regula 1972 Asst Prof Russian. BA PhD 1961 Pittsburgh 1961; MA Harvard 1967; PhD Indiana Field, Jennifer A. 1992 Asst Prof Ag Chemistry. BS 1976 Northland College 1985; PhD Colorado School of Faridani, Adel 1990 Asst Prof Mathematics. Mines 1990 Diplom Physiker 1982; Dr. Rer. Nat. Westalische Field, Katherine G. 1988 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Wilhelms-Univ Munster 1988 Microbiology. BA Yale 1975; MA Boston 1979; PhD Farkas, Daniel F. 1990 Dept Head & Prof Food Oregon 1985 Science & Technology. BS MIT 1954, MS 1955, PhD Filip, Gregory M. 1990 Assoc Prof Forest Science. 1960 BS Oregon State 1972; PhD New Hampshire 1976 Famess, Donald H. K. 1963 Assoc Prof Economics. Finch, David V. 1977 Assoc Prof Mathematics. BA BA Reed 1957; PhD Washington 1968 Swarthmore College 1972; PhD MIT 1977 Farnsworth Dan E. 1972 Res Asst Fisheries & Fink, Gregory B. 1964 Prof Pharmacy. BS Montana Wildlife. BS Oregon State 1971 1950; PhD Utah 1960 Farnsworth, Gary Lynn 1989 Asst Prof Union Finnan, Robert Wilson 1986 Int'l Student Adviser, County Extn. BS Wyoming 1984, MS 1986 Instr English Language Institute. BA Arizona 1973, Farrell, John Patrick 1968 Assoc Prof Economics. MA 1976 BS Wisconsin 1961, MS 1964, PhD 1973 Firth, James Leslie 1973 Assoc Prof Education. AB Farris, Neysa A. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Central San Diego State 1962; MS 1969; PhD Arizona State Oregon Ag Res Center. BS Oregon State 1991 1974 Faudskar, John David 1972 Asst Prof & Staff Chair Fischer, Stacey L. 1986 Faculty Res Asst, Plant Tillamook Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1969, MS 1980 Clinic Technician, Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Clemson 1979; MS Penn State 1986 Faulhaber, Duane D. 1978 Asst Director Budgets & Planning. BS Oregon 1972 Fisher, April 1990 Instr English Language Institute. BA Vanderbilt 1962; MA Middlebury 1965 Fausett, Lowell A. 1992 Project/Cost Mgr. Ag. Exp. Station-Directors Office. BA Idaho 1983 Fisher, Charles E. 1981 Instr, Director of Facilities & Intramural Sports. BS Colorado State 1966, MEd Fayad, Mona 1990 Asst Prof English. BA Univ of 1969 Damascus 1979; MA Illinois 1982, PhD 1986 Fisher, Glenn Collins 1976 Prof Extn Federiuk, Joyce 1991 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Entomologist. BS UC-Davis 1969, PhD 1977 Atmospheric Sciences. AB UC-Berkeley 1980, MA 1982; MSc MIT 1987 Fisher, Joseph Patrick 1981 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Macalester Fein, Betty Y. 1970 Asst Prof Mathematics. PhD College 1975; MS Oregon State 1979 UCLA 1968 Fisk, Martin Robert 1983 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Fein, Burton Ira 1970 Prof Mathematics. BS Atmospheric Sciences. BS Vermont 1969; PhD Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn 1961; MS Rhode Island 1978 Wisconsin 1962; PhD Oregon 1965 Fendall, Roger K. 1968 Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Fitch, Luther Aaron 1960 Prof Umatilla Co Extn. BS Idaho 1956; MS Michigan State 1960 Oregon State 1960; PhD N Dakota State 1964 Fitzgerald, Stephen A. 1984 Assoc Prof & Fenk, Steve 1990 Asst Sports Info Director Deschutes Co Extn. Agent. BS SUNY C Environ Sc Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oregon State 1987 1979; MS Idaho 1983 Ferguson, Deltra Ann 1992 Instr Women's Studies. Fitzpatrick, Martin S 1989 Res Assoc Fisheries & BA Oregon 1983; MA Northwestern Univ 1987; Wildlife. BA Harvard 1980; PhD Oregon State 1990 PhD Oregon 1992 0 1977 Floyd, Mark M. 1981 Instr News Writer News & Communication Services. BS Oregon State 1978, MS 1990 Folts, James A. 1972 Assoc Prof of Art. AB Princeton 1966; BA Oregon State 1972; MS Oregon 1980 Fontana, Peter Robert 1967 Prof Physics. MS Miami 1958; PhD Yale 1960 Forbes, Leonard 1983 Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. BS Alberta-Edmonton 1962; MS Illinois 1963, PhD 1970 Ford, Ellen M. 1989 Instr Science & Math Education. BS Oregon 1966 Ford, Mary S. Jesse 1990 Assoc Prof Fisheries & Wildlife. BA Swarthmore College 1973; MS Yale 1976; PhD Minnesota 1984 Forrer, Johannes B. 1982 Faculty Res Asst Forest Products. BS Univ of Stellenbosch (South Africa) 1969; BS Univ of South Africa 1978; MS Oregon State 1987 Forsberg, Neil Elliott 1985 Assoc Prof Animal Sciences. BSA Manitoba 1975, MSc 1977; PhD UCDavis 1983 Forsyth, Carol S. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BA Mississippi State 1985, MS 1989 Forsyth, Paul G. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Forest Products. BS Mississippi State 1986, MS 1988 Foster, James C. 1985 Dept Chair & Assoc Prof Political Science. BA Lewis & Clark College 1969; MA Cal State-Los Angeles 1971; PhD Washington 1976 Foster, Rebecca 1993 Asst Director for CSFA. BA Lycoming College 1982; MS Pennsylvania State 1988 Fowles, Nanci 1991 Faculty Res Asst Microbiology. BS Oregon State 1990 Fox, Margaret Wynne 1982 Instr Educational Opportunities. BS Georgia Southern College 1971; MEd Oregon State 1983, PhD 1992 Foxal, Richard 1987 Asst Gymnastics Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BA Central Washington 1970, MEd 1972 France, Thomas Traxler 1969 Asst Prof, Asst Director of Publications. BS Iowa State 1959 Franchini, Joseph Earl 1989 Asst Prof Jefferson/Warm Springs Co Extn Agent. BS New Mexico State 1985, MS 1989 Francis, Ralph T Jr. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Center for Gene Research & Biotechnology. BS Winona State 1980; PhD Oregon State 1984 Francis, Sally K. 1982 Dept Head & Prof Apparel, Interiors, Housing, & Merchandising. BS Bowling Green 1969; MEd Miami 1971; PhD Ohio State 1981 Francis, Wilbur M., Jr. 1986 Director Environ. Health & Safety. BA UCLA 1972, MA 1977 324 Faculty Frank, Anthony A. 1989 Asst Prof Veterinary Medicine. BA Wartburg College 1981; BS Illinois 1983, DVM 1985; PhD Purdue 1988, Dipl ACVP, Furman, Todd 1992 Instr Philosophy. BA Cal StateChico 1986; MA UC-Santa Barbara 1990, PhD 1992 1981 Geller, Bruce L. 1987 Asst Prof Microbiology. BA ABVT Frank, Robert Joseph 1969 Dept Chair & Prof English. BA St. John's (Minnesota) 1962; MA Minnesota 1968, PhD 1969 Franke, Christine A. 1984 Sr Faculty Res Asst Geier, Gilda Naziri 1989 Director of Res. & Planning Development Office. BS Southwest Texas col Michigan State 1972; PhD Utah 1982 Gentle, Thomas H. Assoc Prof, Communication Specialist, Ag Communications. BA Michigan 1962; MFA Oregon 1969 George, Karen Marie 1985 Asst Director & Instr New Student Programs. BS Oregon State 1981 George, Melvin R. 1984 The Delpha & Donald Campbell Director of Libraries, Prof. BS St. Cloud 1959, MS 1960; MA Minnesota 1965; PhD Chicago Gable, Kevin Patrick 1988 Asst Prof Chemistry. BS Miami 1981; MS Cornell 1984, PhD 1987 Gaines, George 1989 Asst to Director of Microbiology. BA Texas 1975 Admissions. BS Oregon State 1989 Res) Pharmacy. (Sr H. 1986 Asst Prof Paul Franklin, Gaiser, Inga Leigh 1986 Faculty Res Asst Crop & BA Washington 1975, BS 1978; MS Rochester 1981, Soil Science. BS Oregon State 1985, MS 1988 PhD 1985 Galloway, Robin L. 1991 Instr Linn Co Extn. BS 1988 Asst Prof Wheeler Franz, Christian Rulofson 1979 Co Extn. BS Cal Poly 1985; MS Nevada-Reno 1987 Oregon State 1985 Richard Allen 1969 Assoc Prof Speech George, Wilbert 1962 Prof Biochemistry & Gamble, Fraundorf, Martha Norby 1975 Assoc Prof Communication. BS Illinois State 1965, MS 1967; Biophysics. BS Wayne State 1955, PhD 1960 Economics. BA Carleton College 1968; MA Cornell MFA San Diego State 1980 1971, PhD 1976 Gammill, Linda F. 1992 Asst Prof (Visiting) Acctg Georgiou, Constance 1987 Asst Prof Nutrition & New Mexico Univ 1970, & Info Mgmt. BS Eastern Frederick, William James Jr. 1983 Dept Head & Food Mgmt. BA Michigan 1966; MS Ohio State MS 1975; PhD Nebraska-Lincoln 1984 Prof Chemical Engineering. BS Maine 1967, MS 1974; PhD Oklahoma State 1986 1969, PhD 1973 Gampert, Ulrich 1989 Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Gerding, Bernard F. 1990 Asst Prof Military Science. BS Gymnasium of Lichtensfels (Germany) Freeman, Peter Kent 1968 Prof Chemistry. BS UCScience. BS Oregon State 1975 1972; MS Tech Munich (Germany) 1977 Berkeley 1953; PhD Colorado 1958 Gerros, Terry C. 1992 Asst Prof Veterinary Gamroth, Michael Joseph 1986 Extension Dairy Freier, Timothy A. 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Medicine. BS Kentucky 1976; DVM Auburn Univ Specialist, Assoc Prof Animal Sciences. BS Oregon Veterinary Medicine. BA Augustana College 1983; 1981 State 1973, MAg 1980 MS Iowa State 1986, PhD 1991 Gerth, William J. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Gangwer, Michael Ira 1990 Asst Prof Marion Co Freilich, Michael 1992 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Wildlife. BS Fairfield Univ 1988 Extn. BS Cal Poly State 1975; MS Wisconsin 1976 Atmospheric Sciences. BS Haverford College 1975, PhD Scripps 1981 Gerwick, William H. 1988 Prof Pharmacy. BS UCGantt, David A. 1991 Head Women's Volleyball French, Margaret 1989 Asst Prof Postsecondary & Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS College of Great Davis 1976; PhD Cal-San Diego 1981 Falls 1978; MS Montana State 1983 Giardina, Larry J. 1983 Asst Prof Jackson Co Extn. Tech Ed. BS Oregon State 1975; MS 1976; PhD BSA Georgia 1976; MS Oregon State 1980 Monash Univ-Melbourne (Australia) 1983 Garbacik, Carol 1986 Sr Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BS Kansas State 1977; MS Oregon State Friedman, Leonard H. 1992 Asst Prof Public Gibson, Wayne P. 1983 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & 1984 Atmospheric Sciences. BA Cal-Santa Barbara 1978; Health. BA Cal State-Northridge 1977, MPH 1982; MS Oregon State 1982 PhD USC 1991 Garcia, Kay S. 1988 Asst Prof. BA Wisconsin 1973, MA 1983, PhD 1987 Frishkoff, Patricia 1978 Director & Prof Family Gilkey, Leslie L. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Microbiology. BS Oregon State 1988 Business Program. BA St. Lawrence 1966; DBA Kent Gard, Steve Robert 1983 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic State 1974 & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon 1982 Gillis, Dawn E. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Health & Human Performance. BS Florida 1988; MS Frissell, Christopher A. 1985 Res Assoc Fisheries & Gardiner, Catherine S 1992 Res Assoc Wildlife. BA Montana 1982; MS Oregon State 1987, Massachusetts 1991 Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Michigan State PhD 1992 1980; MS Southern Illinois 1982; PhD Oregon State Gillis, John Simon 1976 Prof Psychology. BA 1988 Stanford 1959; MS Cornell 1961; PhD Colorado Froman, David Paul 1984 Assoc Prof Animal Sciences. BS Bob Jones 1976; MS Clemson 1978, 1965 Gardner, Jerry W 1989 Asst Prof Marion Co Extn. PhD 1982 BS Oregon 1971; MA Southern California 1981; Gingrich, Gale Allen 1973 Assoc Prof Marion Co MM Willamette 1984 Fryer, John L. 1963 OSU Distinguished Professor, Extn. BS Oregon State 1972, MS 1979 Emile F. Pernot Distinguished Professorship in Gardner, John Arvy, Jr. 1973 Prof Physics. BA Rice Giordano, Peter A. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Forest Microbiology, Dept Chair Microbiology, Prof 1961; MS Illinois 1963, PhD 1966 Science. BS Michigan State 1987; MS Oregon State Microbiology & Fisheries. BS Oregon State 1956, MS 1989 Garets, Steve Brent 1984 Acting Instr, Training 1957, PhD 1964 Specialist Public Health Giorgi, Tamra L. 1991 Promotions & Marketing Fryer, Sarah Elizabeth Asst Prof (Sr Res) Zoology. Garity, Dennis J. 1981 Assoc Prof Mathematics. BS Coordinator- Intercollegiate Athletics. BA Fresno BSc Wales (UK) 1980, PhD 1986 State 1990 Wisconsin 1973, MA 1976, PhD 1980 Fuchigami, Leslie Hirao 1970 Prof Horticulture. BS Giovannoni, Stephen J. 1988 Asst Prof Garland, John Joseph, Jr. 1973 Assoc Prof Forest Hawaii 1964; MS Minnesota 1966, PhD 1970 Microbiology. BA Cal-San Diego 1974; MS Boston Engineering, Extn Timber Harvesting Specialist. BS 1978; PhD Oregon 1984 Fuller, Stephen W. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Computer Oregon State 1970; MS Minnesota 1972; PhD Science Engineering. BS California 1990 Oregon State 1990 Girard, Anne-Marie 1989 Faculty Res Asst Center for Gene Research. BA Carleton College 1986 Fulton, David C. 1991 Development Garman, Steve 1990 Res Assoc Forest Science. BS Communications Officer, Development Office. BA Pennsylvania State 1979; MS New Hampshire 1981; Glass, William Ray 1956 Prof Apparel, Interiors, Stanford 1949 PhD Massachusetts 1990 Housing, & Merchandising. BArch Oregon 1956 Fultz, Stanley W. 1991 Asst Prof Tillamook Co Garrison, C. James 1988 Prof Civil Engineering. BS Glassman, Carol A. 1980 Faculty Res Asst Forest Extn. BS Pennsylvania State 1982; MS Virginia Tech Nebraska 1960, MS 1962; PhD Washington 1968 Science. BS Eastern Michigan 1974; BS Oregon State 1984 1979 Gartner, Barbara L. 1992 Asst Prof Forest Products Funck, James W. 1979 Assoc Prof Forest Products. Res. BA Swarthmore College 1979; MS Alaska 1982; Gleason, John F. 1987 Faculty Res Asst Forest BS Iowa State 1974, MS 1977, PhD 1979 PhD Stanford 1990 Science. BS Iowa State 1984; MS Oregon State 1987 Funk, C. Joel 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Ag Gast, Barbara Sobo 1987 Inst MU Craft Center. BA Gleicher, Gerald Jay 1966 Prof Chemistry. BS Chemistry. BA Tabor College 1982; MS Kansas State UC-Berkeley 1970; Art Educ Credential Oregon Brooklyn College 1959; MS Michigan 1961, PhD 1987, PhD 1992 State 1980 1963 Funk, Kenneth H, 111980 Asst Prof Industrial & Gathercoal, Forrest James 1969 Prof Education. Gleicher, Mary Kay 1980 Sr Instr Chemistry. BA Mfg Engineering. BA Taylor 1975; MS Ohio State BMus Oregon 1957, LLB 1966, JD 1971 Denison 1956; MS Michigan 1962 1977, PhD 1980 Gaza-Bulseco, Georgeen Setsuko 1985 Faculty Res Glenn, Cheryl 1989 Asst Prof English. BS Ohio Asst Zoology. BS Oregon State 1985 State 1972, MA 1981, PhD 1989 Faculty Glenn, Judith Ann 1985 Asst Prof & Reference Librarian, Kerr Library. BA St. Mary's 1977; MLS Brigham Young 1984; MS Oregon State 1990 Glocker, Barbara 1991 Res Assoc Ag Chemistry. PhD Universitat Konstanz (Germany) 1990 Glocker, Michael Otto 1990 Res Assoc Ag Chemistry. Diploma Universitat Konstanz (Germany) 1987, PhD 1990 Gobeli, David Harold 1982 Director Oregon Productivity & Technology Center & Prof Mgmt & Marketing. MSEE Minnesota 1965, MBA 1978, PhD 1982 Goblirsch, Susan A. 1987 Instr Extension. BA Denver 1970 Goering, Lois A. 1988 Assoc Dean Home Ec, Ext HEc Prog Leader/, Asst Prof Extn. BS Iowa State 1960, MS 1969; EdD North Carolina State 1986 Goldberg, Natalie P. 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Cal Poly 1983; MS Arizona 1987, PhD 1990 Gonor, Jefferson John 1964 Alice Rohm Professor of Oceanographic Education & Prof & Student Adviser Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences & Zoology. BS Southwestern Louisiana 1953; PhD Washington 1964 Gonzalez, Manolete 1985 Asst Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BS Ateneo de Manila Univ 1972; MBA Northwestern 1974; PhD Southern California 1985 Good, James Wunder 1980 Assoc Prof, Extn Oceanographer. BA Susquehanna 1966; MS Oregon State 1976, PhD 1982 Goodlett, Sally 1993 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Texas-Arlington 1990; MS Texas Tech 1992 Goodnick, Stephen Marshall 1986 Assoc Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. BS Trinity 1973; MS Colorado State 1977, PhD 1983 Gordon, Louis Irwin 1969 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS UCLA 1951; MS Scripps 1953; PhD Oregon State 1973 Gore, Makarand 1989 Res Assoc Chemistry. BSc Poona 1979, MSc 1981; PhD Alberta (Canada) 1987 Gould, Steven J. 1982 Prof Chemistry. BS UCLA 1966; PhD MIT 1970 Grace, Patrick 1989 Head of Special Referance Svcs & Asst Prof, Ken Library. AB Marquette 1965; MLS Louisiana State 1985; J.D. Marquette Law School 1968 Gradin, Joseph L. 1973 Res Assoc Veterinary Medicine. BS Oregon State 1973, MS 1976, PhD 1989 Graham, Cheryl Ann 1983 Instr, Health Educator Student Health Center. BS Oregon State 1980, MS 1982 Graham, David 1992 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Florida Inst of Tech 1975; MS Rhode Island 1980; PhD MIT/Woods Hole 1987 Graham, Roger C. 1990 Asst Prof Acctg & Info Mgmt. MS Montana 1984; PhD Oregon 1990 Grass, Charlene G. 1992 Asst Univ Librarian for Automation & Technical Services, Kerr Library. BA Univ of Detroit 1973; MLS Missouri 1978 Grass, Jeffrey Brian 1978 Asst Prof, Director Publications & OSU Press. BA Oregon 1970; MAIS Oregon State 1985 Gray, Carrie Ann 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Wisconsin 1990 Gray, Clifford Frederick 1961-2, 1965 Prof Mgmt Sc Marketing. BS Millikin 1959; MBA Indiana 1961; DBA Oregon 1966 Gray, Linda L. 1989 Instr Wash Co Extn. BS Youngstown 1973 Gray, Lizbeth Ann 1984 Assoc Prof Education. BS Oregon 1973; MSW Chicago 1976; PhD Washington State 1985 Greber, Brian J. 1989 Assoc Prof Forest Resources. 325 Grosenbach, Douglas W. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Microbiology. BS Oregon State 1992 Gross, Joan E. 1989 Asst Prof Anthropology. BA Montana 1979; MA Texas 1981, PhD 1985 Grover, Jill J. 1983 Res Assoc Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Utah 1973; PhD Rutgers BS West Virginia 1978, MS 1980; PhD Virginia Poly 1982 1983 Grander, Anita L. 1986 Asst Prof Geosciences. BS UC-Berkeley 1977; PhD Stanford 1986 Grzegorczyk, Iwona M. 1992 Asst Prof (Visiting) Mathematics. MSc Warsaw Univ (Poland) 1982; PhD UC-Berkeley 1990 Guenther, Ronald Bernard 1966 Prof Mathematics. BA Oregon State 1959, MA 1962; PhD Colorado 1964 Gubrud, Oscar A. 1965 Asst Prof Extn Seed Certification. BS Oregon State 1964 Green, Anita Louise 1976 Sr Instr Horticulture. BS Montana State 1964; MS Colorado State 1968 Green, James L. 1975 Prof, Extn Specialist in Ornamental Horticulture. BS Colorado State 1965, MS 1967, PhD 1973 Green, John R. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Ag & Resource Economics. BS Iowa State 1982, MS 1991 Green, Kinsey B. 1984 Dean of Home Economics & Education; Prof of Home Economics, Communication & Education. BS Virginia 1960; MS Maryland 1965, PhD 1969 Green, Neal J. 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Gutenberger, Susan K. 1987-91, 1992 Res Assoc Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Idaho 1976, MS 1983; PhD Oregon State 1992 Chemistry. BS SUNY-Buffalo 1986; MS Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst 1986, PhD 1992 Green, Ronald R. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Washington 1972 Greenwald, David N. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Evergreen State 1991 Greer, Arthur J. 1985 Asst Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BS Colorado State 1966, MS 1968; PhD Nebraska 1981 Gregerson, Donna Marie 1974 Assoc Prof Benton Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1974, MS 1977 Gregg, Janice M. 1981 Assoc Prof Jackson Co Extn Home Economics. BA Central Washington 1972; MACE Washington State 1981 Gregor, John 1990 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1990 Gregory, Shirley M. 1987 Director & Instr Career Planning & Placement Center. BS North Dakota 1967, MS 1969; PhD Oregon State 1985 Gregory, Stanley V. 1977 Assoc Prof (Sr Res) Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Tennessee-Knoxville 1971; MS Oregon State 1975, PhD 1980 Grenier, Jeffrey J. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Utah State 1979; MS Humboldt State 1991 Griffin, Donald Alan 1964 Sr Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BA Cal State-Chico 1964; MS Oregon State 1970 Griffin, Richard William 1984 Head of Library Automation, Ken Library. BA Reading 1973; MLS Poly of N. London 1975; BA Texas 1982; MS Oregon 1984 D Hacker, Amy L. 1991 Instr Biology. BA UCBerkeley 1985; MS Oregon State 1991 Hackleman, Debra Marie Bond 1981 Head of Catalog Dept & Asst Prof, Ken Library. BA Oregon State 1975; MLS Oregon 1976; MS Oregon State 1988 Haddon, R. Lance 1985 Asst Director-School of Education. BA Michigan State 1967, MA 1973; PhD Oregon State 1987 Hafner-Eaton, Chris P. 1992 Asst Prof Public Health. BA UC-San Diego 1986; MPH UCLA 1988, PhD 1992 Hagar, Joan 1990 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS Wisconsin-Madison 1984 Hagelberg, Carl 1989 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Northern Arizona 1981, MS 1985; MS Oregon State 1989 Hale, Jeffrey Alan 1992 Director of Development College of Liberal Arts. BS & BA San Diego State 1978, MA 1987 Hall, Jean A. 1990 Asst Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS Oregon State 1981; DVM Washington State 1982; MS Colorado State 1987, PhD 1989, Dipl ACVIM Hall, Roberta Louise 1974 Prof Anthropology. BA Indiana 1963; MA Oregon 1969, PhD 1970 USN Test Pilot School 1984; MPS Auburn Univ Halpern, Charles B. 1985 Res Assoc Forest Science. BS Cornell 1980; PhD Oregon State 1987 Halse, Richard Ray 1990 Inst Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Northern State 1970; MS Arizona 1973; PhD Oregon State 1980 Halverson, Robert L 1991 Contract Officer Business Office. BS Denver 1965 Hamilton, Robert Roy 1968 Prof Union Co Extn. BS Washington State 1966, MS 1971 Hamilton, Susan E. 1992 Instr English. BS Kansas 1969; MAIS Oregon State 1992 Hamm, Philip B. 1975 Assoc Prof Umatilla Co Extn. BS Western Oregon State 1975; MS Oregon 1988 State 1981 Grisso, Kasia J. 1992 Energy/Environ. Ed. Hamm, Serena Kaye 1991 Faculty Res Asst Botany Coordinator & Instr - Extn. Program for Energy. BS Michigan 1989 Groome, John T. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Nuclear & Plant Pathology. BS Oregon State 1991 Hancock, Astrid Frolich 1963 Asst Prof Exercise & Sport Science. AB Mount Holyoke 1956; MSc Wisconsin 1959 Griffiths, David J. 1967 Prof Physics. BA British Columbia 1959, MS 1960, PhD 1965 Griffiths, Robert P. 1972 Assoc Prof (Sr Res) Microbiology. AB Oberlin 1961; MA San Jose State 1968; PhD Oregon State 1972 Griggs, Lawrence F. 1972 Assoc Prof & Director Educational Opportunities. BA Pacific Lutheran 1970, MA 1972; PhD Oregon State 1978 Grimes, Barney A. 1991 Executive Officer & Assoc Prof Naval Science. BS & BH Texas A & M 1974; MS Engineering. 326 Faculty Hann, David William 1978 Assoc Prof Forest Resources. BS Oregon State 1968, MS 1970; PhD Washington 1978 Hanna, Susan Steele 1981 Assoc Prof (Sr Res) Ag & Resource Economics. BA Maine 1966, MS 1977; PhD Oregon State 1981 Hannaway, David B. 1979 Assoc Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Delaware 1973; MS Tennessee 1975; PhD Kentucky 1979 Hansen, Andrew J. 1987 Asst Prof Forest Science. BS Western Washington 1978; PhD Tennessee 1984 Hansen, Donald E. 1983 Assoc Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS UC-Davis 1970, DVM 1972, MPVM 1983 Hansen, Eric J. 1992 Instr & Educational Program Coordinator-Student Housing. BS Oregon State 1990 Hansen, Everett Mathew 1972 Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Oregon State 1968; MS Wisconsin 1971, PhD 1972 Hansen, Michael C. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Oregon State 1978, MS 1982 Hanson, Dean B. 1972 Sr Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BS Oregon State 1966, MS 1968 Hanson, Eric D. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS Colorado State 1986, MS 1991 Hanus, Frank Joseph 1970 Sr Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Houston 1962, MS Hart, John M. 1985 Assoc Prof Crop & Soil Science, Extn Soil Scientist. BS Arizona 1969, MS 1971; PhD Nebraska 1976 Hart, Roger Alan 1971 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Tufts 1962; MSc Yale 1965 Harter, Rod A. 1990 Asst Prof Exercise & Sport Science. BS East Stroudsburg State College 1976; MS Indiana State 1977; PhD Oregon 1987 Hartigan III, Vincent A. 1992 Instr English. BA Marquette Univ 1989; MAIS Oregon State 1992 Hartsoe, Lauren 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BA Williams College 1991 Harttig, Ulrich 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Food Science & Technology. PhD Univ of Kaiserslautern (Germany) Hashimoto, Andrew G. 1986 Dept Head & Prof Bioresource Engineering. BS Purdue 1966, MS 1968; PhD Cornell 1972 Haskell, William T. 1984 Assoc Prof, Multnomah Co Extn. BA UC-Santa Barbara 1972; MA Michigan 1974 Hathaway, Ronald Lee 1972 Prof & Staff Chair Klamath Co Extn. BS Cal Poly-SLO 1968; MS Nevada-Reno 1972; PhD Oregon State 1987 Hatlevig, Susan 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Chemistry. BS Arizona State 1983; MS UC-San Diego 1984; PhD Arizona State 1989 Haugen, Christian 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Chemistry. BA Reed College 1986; MS Univ of Rochester 1988, PhD 1991 Hanus, Janet Williams 1966 Sr Faculty Res Asst Haun, James Franz 1964 Prof & Director of New Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Washington State Student Programs. BS Eastern Oregon State College 1965; MS Oregon State 1971 1954; MEd Oregon 1960; EdD Oregon State 1967 Hardesty, David P. 1968 Dept Chair & Prof Art. Havazelet, Ehud 1989 Asst Prof English. AB BFA Miami (Ohio) 1966; MFA Cranbrook Academy Columbia 1977; MFA Iowa 1984 of Art 1968 Haverson, Wayne W. 1978 Director & Prof School Hardesty, Penny M. 1990 Director of Dvlpmt of Education. BA Willamette 1958; EdD Northern Communications. BS Oregon State 1971 Colorado 1975 Hardin, Karin 1979 Faculty Res Asst Nutrition & Hawkes, Stephen James 1968 Prof Chemistry. BSc Food Mgmt. BS Oregon State 1979; BS Oregon London 1953; PhD 1963 Health Sciences Univ 1980 Hawkins, Dawn Christina 1970 Prof & Staff Chair Harding, Anna Kristine 1990 Asst Prof Public Umatilla County Extn. BS Oregon State 1970; MS Health. BS Oregon 1972; PhD Oregon State 1990 Southern Oregon State 1977 Hardison, John Robert 1944 Prof Plant Pathology. BS Washington State 1939; MS Michigan 1940, PhD Hawley, L. Burton 1991 Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BS North Carolina-Chapel Hill 1962; 1942 PhD Georgia 1966 Hardt, Ulrich H. 1992 Prof & OSSHE German Haxby, Dean G. 1988 Asst Prof Pharmacy. BS Student Resident Director. MA Lewis & Clark 1961; Oregon State 1980; PharmD Medical University of PhD Oregon 1974 South Carolina 1985 Hare, Jan Marie 1990 Ext Fam Life Spec Assoc Prof Hay, James Warren 1977 Senior Instr Horticulture, Extn. BA Marylhurst 1969; MEd Oregon State 1976, Greenhouse Manager. BS Oregon State 1975; MS PhD 1986 Harmon, Mark E. 1985 Asst Prof Forest Science. BA Colorado State 1977 Hayes, John P. 1992 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Forest Amherst 1975; MS Tennessee 1980; PhD Oregon Science. BS Oregon State 1978; MS Southern State 1986 Oregon 1983; PhD Cornell 1990 Harold, Rosalind R. 1992 Instr Naval Science 1986 Assoc Prof Crop & Soil Harris, Jeffrey E. 1991 Asst Prof Aerospace Studies.Hayes, Patrick Milo Science. BS Arizona State 1980; MS Oregon State BS MIT 1983; MS Purdue 1987 1982; PhD Michigan 1986 Harris, Saint Lawrence 1992 Asst Men's Basketball Haynes, Erin J. 1973 Director of Annual Giving, Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Pittsburgh 1978 Development Office. BS Oregon State 1972, EdM Harrison, James 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) 1979 Chemistry. BA Kalamazoo College 1982; PhD Hays, Charles Alford 1990 Media Svcs Mgr California 1991 Forestry. BS Oregon State 1985 Harrison, William L. 1974 Prof Acctg & Info Hays Patricia Ellen 1986 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic Mgmt. BS Kansas State 1959; MBA Missouri-Kansas & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon 1982, MS 1987 City 1965; PhD UC-Berkeley 1973 Hays, John B. 1987 Prof Ag Chemistry. BS New Hart, David A. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Mexico 1960; PhD Cal-San Diego 1968 Wildlife. BS Univ of Cincinnati 1991 Hart, Douglas Arthur 1989 Asst Prof Columbia Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1979, MS 1985 1966 Headrick, Charlotte Jane 1982 Assoc Prof Speech Communication. BA Tennessee 1969, MACT 1971; PhD Georgia 1982 Healey, Deborah Lynn 1979 Instr English Language Institute. BA Queens 1974; MA Oregon 1976 Heath, Kathleen Frances 1967 Asst Dean (Undergrad Studies) & Head Adviser College of Health & Human Performance, Assoc Prof Exercise & Sport Science. BA Marylhurst 1953; MS Illinois 1963; PhD Oregon 1982 Hebert, David 1988 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Dalhousie 1980; MS Victoria BC 1982; PhD Dalhousie 1988 Hebing, Bradley L. 1992 Asst Prof Aerospace Studies. BA U of Puget Sound 1987; MA U of Northern Colorado 1991 Hedberg, Lise 1956 Res Assoc Chemistry. Candidatus realium Oslo 1952 Hedstrom, Olaf R. 1984 Assoc Prof Veterinary Medicine. BA Montana 1971; MA UC-Berkeley 1972; DVM UC-Davis 1976; MS Iowa State 1981; PhD 1986, Dipl ACVP Heidel, Jerry R. 1988 Asst Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS Washington State 1977, DVM 1980, PhD 1988 Heikkila, Paul Arthur 1969 Assoc Prof Coos Co Extn. BS Washington 1968 Helene, Murray 1988 LISA Proj Assoc Crop & Soil Science. BS Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo 1981; MS Oregon State 1988 Helle, Anita 1990 Coord Eng Ed, Assist Prof English. BA U of Puget Sound 1970, MA 1972; PhD Oregon 1986 Hellickson, Martin Leon 1975 Assoc Prof Bioresource Engineering. BS North Dakota State 1968; MS South Dakota State 1972; PhD Minnesota 1975 Helmick, Sandra A. 1991 Assoc Dean Academic Affairs, College of Home Economics & Education, Prof Home Economics. BS Ohio Univ 1962, MBA 1964; PhD Missouri 1972 Hemphill, Delbert D., Jr. 1976 Prof Horticulture, North Willamette Research & Extension Center. BS Notre Dame 1966; PhD Michigan State 1971 Henderson, Marilyn Christine 1972 Sr Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BA Central Washington 1972 Henderson, Pamela 1975 Instr Forestry Instructional Services & Conferences. BA Edinburgh (Scotland) 1966 Henderson, Robert L. 1980 Asst Prof Extension Seed Certification.BS Cal Poly 1967, 1977; MS Oregon State 1983 Hendricks, Jerry Dean 1975 Prof Food Science & Technology. BS Colorado State 1966, PhD 1971 Hendricks, Jon Albert 1988 Dept Chair & Prof Sociology. BA Washington 1966; MA Nevada 1968; PhD Penn State 1971 Hendrickson, Daniel E. 1992 Asst Prof Military Science. BA San Jose State 1984 Henry, Eric Charles 1988 Res Assoc Botany & Plant Pathology. BA Connecticut 1971; MS Oregon State 1976; PhD British Columbia 1980 Herlihy, Alan Tate 1991 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Fisheries & Wildlife. BA Northwestern 1981; MS Virginia 1984, PhD 1987 Hermes, James C. 1987 Yamhill Co Ext Staff Chair (Interim), Extn Poultry Sc Specialist, Assoc Prof. BS UC-Davis 1979, MS 1981, PhD 1988 Faculty Hemdon, Bob D. 1978 Asst Prof, Assoc Athletic Hobbs, Deborah J. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Director for Operations Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oklahoma 1955 Hemried, Alan G. 1989 Assoc Prof Civil Engineering. BS UC-Berkeley 1977, MS 1978, PhD Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Idaho 1984; MA Oregon State 1987 Hobbs, Stephen D. 1978 Assoc Prof Forest Science. BS New Hampshire 1969; PhD Idaho 1977 Hoffman, Peter Donald 1989 Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BS Oregon State 1986 Hoffman, Robert Lawrence Jr. 1983 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Oregon 1972; BS Oregon State 1982 Hofmann, Gretchen 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Zoology. BA Wyoming 1985; MS Colorado 1987, PhD 1992 1982 Herzog, James Herman 1967 Assoc Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. BS Northwestern 1962; MS Michigan 1963, PhD 1967 Hester, Arlene S. 1983Instructor Forest Resources, Microcomputer Lab. BA Cal State-Long Beach 1969 Hetherington, William Morley, 1111987 Assoc Prof Physics. BS UC-Berkeley 1971; PhD Stanford 1977 Hibbs, David E. 1983 Assoc Prof Extn Specialist Forest Science. BA Carleton College 1972; MS Massachusetts 1976, PhD 1978 Hickey, Beverly J. 1992 Instr Home Econ Child Development Lab. BS UC-Davis 1975; MA Stanford 1977 Hicks, R. Gary 1975 Assoc Dean College of Engineering, Prof Civil Engineering. BS UC-Berkeley 1963, MS 1965, PhD 1970 Hicks, Jill D. 1986 Asst Gymnastics Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oregon State 1982 Higdon, Robert L. 1982 Assoc Prof Mathematics. BA Missouri 1975; MS Stanford 1978, PhD 1981 Higginbotham, Jack F. 1987 Asst Prof Senior Health Physicist, Radiation Center & Dept of Nuclear Engineering. BS Kansas State 1981, MS 1983, PhD 1987 Higgins, Karen 1992 Asst Prof Education. BS Oregon 1974, MA 1982, PhD 1991 Hilderbrand, Kenneth Stephen, Jr. 1969 Assoc Prof, Seafood Specialist. BS Oregon State 1962, MS 1964 Hill, Hatsue Akimoto 1978 Asst Prof, Head Women's Basketball Coach Intercollegiate Athletics Hill, Thomas W. 1984 Instr Animal Sci, Superintendent of Farm Operations. BS Cal PolySan Luis Obispo 1976; MS Oregon State 1990 Hillman, James Forrest 1990 Asst Prof Naval Science. BS Systems Analysis Miami (Ohio) 1986 Hilton, Richard Judd 1987 Faculty Res Asst, Southern Oregon Exp Station. BA Pomona College 1981; MS UC-Davis 1987 327 Hogue, Teresa Ann 1974 Assoc Prof Jefferson Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1972, MS 1984 Hoke, Brady 1989 Asst Football Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Ball State 1981; MS Grand Valley State 1983 Holbo, H. Richard 1975 Res Assoc Forest Products 1960; MS Nevada-Reno 1964; PhD Oregon State Holloway, James L. 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Crop & Soil Science. BS Heidelberg College 1984; M.S. Oregon State 1988, PhD 1992 Holman, Robert Alan 1979 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BSc Royal Military College of Canada 1972; PhD Dalhousie 1979 Holmes, Zoe Ann 1965-69 1974 Prof Nutrition & Food Mgmt. BS Kansas State 1964, MS 1965; PhD Tennessee-Knoxville 1972 Holroyd, Michael Hayden 1978 Asst Prof Marion Cty Extn Agent. BA San Fernando Valley State 1974; MS Cal State-Northridge 1979 Holt, Timothy 1986 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1983 Holtan, Donald W. 1975 Assoc Prof Animal Sciences. BS North Dakota State 1963; MS Washington State 1967, PhD 1973 Holthofer, Donald J. 1975 Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BS Oregon State 1975 Holyoak, Arlene 1981 Assoc Prof Human Development & Family Sciences. BS Utah State 1961; MS Oregon State 1972; PhD Penn State 1981 Hommes, Norman G. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BA Notre Dame 1975; MS Oregon 1982; PhD Oregon State 1988 Hopkins, Roswitha Gertrud 1971 Sr Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. Chemotechniker, Chemistry Institute of Munich 1962 Home, Clara J. 1987 Head Adviser College of 1972 Business. BA Kansas 1959 Holder, Thurman 11 1987-1990; 1992 HCOP Home, Fredrick Herbert 1986 Dean College of Science, Prof Chemistry. AB Harvard 1956; PhD Kansas 1962 Homeck, Donald A. 1986 Sr Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BA Monmouth College-Illinois 1980; MS Illinois 1983 Horton, Gary A. 1990 Faculty Res Asst Horticulture. BS Oregon State 1987 Horwath, William R. 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Bioresource Engineering. BS Southern Illinois Univ 1979; PhD Michigan State 1992 Hogan, Lewis Gregory 1970 Res Assoc Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA, BS Oregon State 1959, MS 1968, PhD 1973 Hogg, Barbara B. 1980 Faculty Res Asst/Asst Director Center for Writing & Learning. BA Oregon State 1977, EdM 1984 Hogle, Janice G. 1988 Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BS Rochester Inst of Tech 1986; BS Iowa State 1981 Coordinator Academic Affairs. BS Northern Arizona 1976, MA 1977 Holland, Michael Edward 1989 Archivist. BS Oklahoma State 1976, MA 1978 Holleman, Kendrick A. 1984 Prof Animal Sciences, Extn Poultry Specialist. BS Texas A & M 1958; MS Nebraska 1962; PhD Missouri 1971 Hollings, William H. 1983 Sr Faculty Res Asst Civil Engineering. BS Bucknell 1976; MS Oregon State 1984 Hollingshead, Nancy C. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BS Oregon State 1973 Hinman, Robert Charles 1978. Assoc Prof Douglas Co Extn. BS Cal State-Chico 1965; MS Cornell 1967 Hino, Jeffry Chester 1984 Instr Production Specialist Forestry Media Center. BS Arizona 1975; MS Oregon 1979 .. Hiratsuka, Yuji 1992 Asst Prof Art. BS Toyko Gakugei Univ 1978; MA New Mexico State 1987; MFA Indiana Univ 1990 Histand, Phillip Claude 1989 Physician Student Health Center. BA Goshen 1972; MD Northwestern 1976 Hixon, Mark Anthony 1984 Assoc Prof Zoology & Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA UC-Santa Barbara 1973, MA 1974, PhD 1979 Ho, Margaret N. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Marine Sciene Center. BS Maine 1985; MS Oregon 1992 Ho, Pui Shing 1987 Assoc Prof Biophysics. BA Franklin & Marshall College 1979; PhD Northwestern 1984 Hoag, Stephen W. 1990 Asst Prof Pharmacy. BS Wisconsin 1982; PhD Minnesota 1990 ui& 1 .. I 4nM ,<< IVY , r 328 Faculty Hosoi, Yasuharu Timo 1969 Assoc Prof Philosophy. BTh, Tokyo Bible Seminary 1954; BD Humphrey, Philip Edward 1982 Assoc Prof Forest Christian Theological Seminary (Indianapolis) 1964; MA Butler; MA Chicago 1968, PhD 1974 Hostetler, William Wayne 1987 Director of Technology Transfer. BA Washington State 1967, Hundley, Patrick D. 1990 Director of Development for Pharmacy. BA Tennessee Wesleyan 1970; MA Middle Tennessee State 1975 Hunt, Sam K. 1989 Asst Director Upward Bound. BS Oregon State 1987 Hunter-Zaworski, Katharine M. 1983 Asst Prof Civil Engineering. BSc British Columbia 1978; MS Tennessee 1980; PhD Oregon State 1988 Hurelbrink, Richard L. 1992 Chief of Party/AgroBusiness Spec Sri Lanka. BS Illinois 1967, MS 1969 Husband, William B. 1985 Assoc Prof History. BA Texas Tech 1969; MA Cal State-Long Beach 1977; PhD. Princeton 1984 Huso, Manuela M.P. 1987 Faculty Res Asst Entomology. BA Whitman College 1978; MS Oregon 1984; MS Oregon State 1988 Husted, Elaine V. 1976 Asst Prof & Staff Chair Grant Co Extn. BS Montana State 1973; EdM Oregon State 1983 Hutton, Norman E. 1977 Assoc Dean & Prof College of Veterinary Medicine. DVM Iowa State MBA 1980 Hosty, Maureen 1991 Mult Co Extn Agent. BS Kansas State 1981, MA 1986 Houglum, Lyla E. 1985 Assoc Prof Extn 4-H Specialist-Youth, Assoc Director for County Programs. BS Montana State 1972; MS Oregon 1981, PhD 1985 Houglum, Robert Michael 1991 Instr Speech Communication. MA Cal State-Northridge 1978; PhD Oregon 1986 House, Reese Milton 1969 Assoc Director & ProfSchool of Education. BA Ball State 1960, MA 1961; EdD Oregon State 1970 Houston, Robert J. 1966 Assoc Prof Public Health. BEd Oregon 1950; MEd Portland 1958; MPH UCBerkeley, EdD 1964 Hovermale, Jeannette T. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BS Humboldt State 1990 Howard, Eric D. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Microbiology. BS Oregon State 1986; MS Arkansas 1991 Howell, Michael Edward 1973-77, 1978 Assoc Prof Sc Staff Chair Malheur Co Extn. BS Idaho 1972, MS 1973 Hruby, Dennis E. 1983 Prof Microbiology. BS Oregon State 1973; PhD Colorado 1977 Hu, Ching Yuan 1985 Assoc Prof Animal Sciences. BS National Chung Hsing 1975; MS UC-Davis 1979, PhD 1984 Hua, Chen 1985 Res Assoc Chemistry. Certificate Sichuan (China) 1966 Huang, Jinfan 1989 Res Assoc Chemistry. BS Nanjing Normal 1982; PhD Oregon State 1989 Hubbard, Amanda K. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BA Oregon State 1983 Huber, Andrew G. 1985 Assoc Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Wisconsin-Platt 1969; MS Oklahoma State 1978; PhD Oregon State 1983 Huber, Michael J. 1986 Asst Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS UC-Davis 1978, DVM 1980 Huber, Wayne Charles 1991 Dept Head & Prof Civil Engineering. BS California Inst of Technology 1963; MS Massachusetts Inst of Technology 1965, PhD 1968 Huddleston, James Herbert 1975 Prof Crop & Soil Science, Extn Soil Scientist. BS Cornell 1963, MS 1965; PhD Iowa State 1969 Hudspeth, Robert Turner 1974 Prof Civil Engineering. BS US Naval Academy 1963; MSCE Washington 1966; PhD Florida 1974 Huffman, Stephen W. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Oregon State 1990 Huffman, Todd E. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Statistics. BS Massachusetts Inst of Technology 1984; MS San Jose State 1989 Huftile, Gary John 1992 Res Assoc Geosciences. BS UC-Davis 1982; MS Oregon State 1988, PhD 1992 Huh, Chih-An 1984 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS National Taiwan 1974, MS 1978; PhD USC 1982 Humphrey, Mark A. 1985 Faculty Res Asst Civil Engineering. BS Oregon State 1984 Products. BS UCNW (UK) 1976, PhD 1982 Jackson, Philip L. 1978 Assoc Prof Geosciences. BA Cal State-Chico 1968; MA Arizona State 1970; PhD Kansas 1977 Jackson, Robert L. 1990 Asst Football Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Northern Illinois 1974 Jackson, Royal Gale 1970 Assoc Prof Forest Resources. BA New Mexico 1960; MA Western New Mexico 1965; PhD New Mexico 1971 Jacobson, Robert Warren 1967 Prof Lincoln Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1963 Jaindl, Raymond Gerard 1988 Res Assoc Rangeland Resources. BS Montana 1978; PhD Oregon State 1988 James, Corinne 1987 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Ft. Lewis College 1976; MS Oregon State 1980, PhD 1987 James, Rodney L. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Arizona 1987; MS Oregon State 1992 James, Steven R. 1975 Sr Faculty Res Asst Central Oregon Exp Station. BS Oregon State 1975 Jansen, Henri Johan E 1985 Assoc Prof Physics. BS Groningen (The Netherlands) 1972, MS 1976, PhD 1966, MS 1969 1981 Huyer, Adriana 1972 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BSc Toronto 1967; MS Oregon State 1971, PhD 1974 Hyman, Michael Richard 1990 Res Assoc Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Univ College, London 1980; PhD Univ of Bristol 1984 Jarmer, Christopher B. 1988 Faculty Res Asst Forest Engineering. BS 1986 Oregon State, MBA 0 lisa, Maarit K. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Chemical Engineering. MS Helsinki Univ (Finland) 1983; PhD ABO Akademi (Finland) 1992 Iltis, Robert S. 1991 Asst Prof Speech Commication. BA Colorado State 1978, MS 1981; PhD Wisconsin-Madison 1989 Ingham, Elaine R. 1986 Asst Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BA St Olaf College 1974; MS Texas A & M 1977; PhD Colorado State 1981 Ingham, Russell Elliot 1985 Assoc Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BA St. Olaf College 1974; MS Texas A & M 1977; PhD Colorado State 1981 Ingle, James Davis, Jr. 1972 Prof Chemistry. BS Illinois 1968; PhD Michigan State 1971 Inman, Roderick Daner 1971 Sr Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BS Oregon State 1967 Isaacs, Frank Barrett 1979 Sr Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Michigan Technical 1973, MS 1976 Isensee, Philip H. 1990 Mgr Integration Training & Support - Computer Services. BSEE Idaho 1970 Isley, Arleigh Gentry 1969 Assoc Prof & Staff Chair Wallowa Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1969, MS 1977 Istok, Jonathan David 1986 Assoc Prof Civil Engineering. BS Ohio State 1978; MS Oregon State 1981, PhD 1986 Ivey, Richard G. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Microbiology. BS Oregon State 1991 1988 Jarvis, Debra Joyce 1971 Coordinator Youth Traffic Safety. BS Oregon State 1975 Jarvis, Robert Leo 1971 Prof Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Humboldt State 1963, MS 1965; PhD Southern Illinois 1969 Jasman, Lora Lee 1990 Physician Student Health Center. BS Idaho 1980; MD Washington 1985 Jayakumar, Puthenpura K. 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. MS Georgia Inst of Technology 1983; PhD Florida State 1992 Jeffers, Ronald Harrison 1974 Assoc Prof Music. BM Michigan 1966, MA 1968; MA Occidental College 1971 Jeffreys, Bradford Joseph 1987 Asst Prof Extension. BS Cal Poly San Luis Obispo 1977, MS 1981; EdD Virginia Polytechnic 1987 Jenkins, Christopher H.M. 1991 Asst Prof Mechanical Engineering. BS Florida Inst of Techology 1971; MS Oregon State 1989, PhD 1991 Jenkins, Jeffrey James 1990 Asst Prof Ag Chemistry. BS Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo 1972; PhD Michigan State 1981 Jenne, William Charles 1965 Assoc Prof Sociology. BS Illinois State 1953; AM Illinois 1958, PhD 1964 Jennings, Joe Cannon, Jr. 1981 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS North Carolina 1972; MS Oregon State 1981 Jenny, Mary 1989 Economic Development Librarian, Kerr Library. BA Kansas 1965; JD UCHastings 1972; MLIS Louisiana State 1988 Jensen, Chris L. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Hermiston Res Ext Center. BS Iowa State 1987 Jensen, Christine R. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Education. BS Oregon State 1991 Jensen, Edward Charles 1976 Asst Prof Forest Jefferson Co Extn. BA Sacramento State 1965; BS Resources, Coordinator Forestry Media Center. BS Illinois 1973; MS Washington 1976 Jensen, Lynn B. 1983 Assoc Prof Malheur Co Extn. BS Idaho 1972; MS Utah State 1980 Johnson, Arthur Guy 1966 Director of Radiation Oregon State 1970, MS 1972 Center, Prof Nuclear Engineering & Radiation 0 Jacks, Clinton C. 1972 Assoc Prof & Staff Chair Health. BS Missouri 1956, MS 1958 Faculty Johnson,Don B. 1976 Asst Director & Asst Prof Kaldenberg, Dennis O. 1987 Director Professional Student Activities Memorial Union. BS Southern Oregon 1971; MFA U of Puget Sound 1973 Johnson, Douglas Edward 1982 Assoc Prof Rangeland Resources. BA Hastings 1970; MS Fort Hays State 1976; PhD Colorado State 1981 Johnson, Duane Paul 1959 Prof Extn 4-H Youth Specialist. BS Iowa State 1959; MEd Colorado State Svcs Program & Res Assoc College of Business. BS Iowa State 1974, MS 1977, PhD 1980 1970 Johnson, Eugene 1965 Sr Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BS Oregon State 1966 Johnson, John Granville 1969 Prof Geosciences. BA UCLA 1957, MA 1959, PhD 1964 Johnson, Kenneth Bjorn 1988 Asst Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Minnesota 1979; MS Oregon State 1982; PhD Minnesota 1986 Johnson, Kenneth Norman 1985 Prof Forest Resources. BS UC-Berkeley 1965; MS Wisconsin 1969; PhD Oregon State 1973 Johnson, Linda A. 1991 Academic Adviser College of Business. BS UC-San Bernardino 1985 Johnson, Melanie T. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Oceanography. BS Nevada-Las Vegas 1992 Johnson, Michael P. 1985 Sr Instr Computer Science Engineering. BS UC-Davis 1959; PhD Oregon 1966 Johnson, Rebecca Lynn 1984 Assoc Prof Forest Resources. BA Wisconsin 1977; MS Michigan State 1979, PhD 1984 Johnson, Saralyn S. 1990 Asst Prof Douglas Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1983; MS Penn State 1989 Johnson, Simon Sigvart 1971 Assoc Prof English. BA Colorado State 1962; MS Columbia 1963; MFA Iowa 1969, PhD 1972 Johnson, W. Curtis 1968 Prof Biochemistry & Biophysics. BA Yale 1961; PhD Washington 1966 Johnston, Mark 1989 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1989 Johnston, Richard Stanley 1966 Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BA Washington State 1960; MS Massachusetts 1963; PhD UC-Berkeley 1970 Jolliff, Gary David 1976 Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Ohio State 1956, MS 1966; PhD Colorado State Kantor, Joseph Ralph 1965 Physician (Consultant) Fruits. BA Illinois 1969, BS 1982, MS 1985 1956; MA Washington 1962; PhD Oregon 1971 Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Gonzaga 1971; MS Washington State 1977; PhD Oregon State 1987 Kienmec, Gary Lee 1986 Assoc Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Indiana 1969; MS Purdue 1974; PhD Keel, Robert L. 1992 Instr Military Science. Keller, George Henrik 1975 Vice Provost for Research, Extension, & Int'l Programs, Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Connecticut 1954; MS 1986 1968 Mathematics. BS Iowa State 1952, MS 1956, PhD Iowa 1959 Jones, Julia Allen 1989 Assoc Prof Geosciences BA Hampshire 1977; MA Johns Hopkins 1979, PhD 1983 Jordan, Cheryl W. 1976 Asst Prof Apparel, Interiors, Housing, & Merchandising. BS Kansas State 1968, MS 1971; PhD Oklahoma State 1987 Jordon, Shelley I. 1986 Assoc Prof Art. BFA NYC Kenney, John G. 1992 Asst Prof Elec & Computer Engineering. BS Columbia; PhD Camegie Mellon Kaattari, Ilsa M. 1983 Sr Instr Microbiology. BS UC-Davis 1972, MA 1974 Kaattari, Stephen L. 1982 Prof Microbiology. BS UC-Davis 1973, PhD 1979 Kadkhodayan, Saloumeh 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Food Science & Technology. BS College of Charleston 1987; PhD S. Carolina 1992 Kalk, Peter Arthur 1968 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Michigan Tech 1962 Kiekel, Robert Dene 1966 Assoc Prof . BA Willamette Kaufmann, Philip R. 1991 Assoc Prof (Res) School of Visual Arts 1976; MFA Brooklyn College 1969 Kerkvliet, Nancy I. 1977 Assoc Prof (Sr Res) Ag Chemistry. BS Wisconsin State-Eau Claire 1970; MS Oregon State 1973, PhD 1976 Kerl, Caroline A. 1986 Legal Adviser President's Office, Asst Prof. AB UC-Berkeley 1971; JD Hastings College of Law 1974 Kerle, Elizabeth 1990 Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BS Cornell 1982; MS Oregon State 1986 Student Health Center. BSc, MD Nebraska 1958 Kanury, A. Murty 1985 Prof Mechanical Engineering. BEng Andhra Waltair (India) 1961; MS Minnesota 1963, PhD 1969 Kershaw, Nancy L. 1984 Assoc Prof Tillamook Co Karchesy, Joseph J. 1979 Assoc Prof Forest Extension. BS Oregon State 1978; MS Stephen F. Products. BS Washington 1968; MS Victoria 1970; Austin 1981 PhD Oregon State 1974 Kesler, Lfnc 1983 Assoc Prof English. BA Yale 1971; Karow, Russell Stanley 1983 Assoc Prof, Extn MA Toronto 1973, PhD 1981 Cereal Specialist. BS Wisconsin-Stevens Point 1975; MS Wisconsin-Madison 1980, PhD 1983 Keszler, Douglas A. 1985 Assoc Prof Chemistry. BS Southwestern Oklahoma State 1979; PhD Kaser, John Robert 1971 Faculty Res Asst Northwestern 1984 Electronics Engineer Communication Media Center. BS Oregon State 1969 Ketchum Lynn G. 1988 Asst Prof Electronic Media Spec Ag Communications. BA Arizona 1974, MED Kasimor, Kathryn 1990 Faculty Res Asst 1987 Horticulture. BS Oregon State 1984, MS 1989 Khapalov, Alexandre 1992 Res Assoc (Visiting) Kassner, Michael Ernest 1990 Assoc Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. BS Ural State Mechanical Engineering. BSSE Northwestern 1972; Univ (USSR) 1976; PhD Inst of Math & Mechanics MS Stanford 1979, PhD 1981 Kauffman, John Boone 1986 Assoc Prof Rangeland (USSR) 1982 Kiaei, Sayfe 1987 Asst Prof Elec & Comp Resources. BS Texas Tech 1978; MS Oregon State Engineering. BS Washington State 1982, MS 1984, 1982; PhD UC-Berkeley 1986 PhD 1987 Kaufman, Diane 1988 Asst Prof Ext Agent Small Utah 1956; PhD Illinois 1966 Keller, Mark Robert 1988 Faculty Res Asst Animal Sciences. BS Oklahoma State 1978 Kellogg, Loren Dudley 1978 Assoc Prof Forest Engineering. BS Humboldt State 1974; MF Oregon State 1976, PhD 1986 Kelsey, Mary Wallace 1958 Assoc Prof Nutrition & Food Mgmt. BS New York State-Plattsburgh 1955; MS Rhode Island 1957 Kemp, Kurtis K. 1988 Asst Baseball Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oregon State 1983 Kendrick, Catherine Mary 1983 Instr Academic Affairs. BS North Wales 1976, MS 1977 Kennedy, Timothy Christopher 1976 Assoc Prof Mechanical Engineering. BS SUNY-Buffalo 1968; MS Stanford 1969, PhD 1972 Kennedy, Timothy Curtis 1989 Instr English. BA UCLA 1980; MDiv Talbot Theological Seminary 1984; MA Oregon 1989 Kenneke, Larry Jon 1970 Prof Education. BS Northern Illinois 1961, MS 1965; EdD Oregon State Jones, Donald A. 1990 Assoc Prof (Visiting) 329 Oregon State 1984 Kilgore, Anne C. 1990 Project Coordinator, Continuing Higher Ed. BA Oregon State 1985 Kim, Carol Hyungmie 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Microbiology. BA Wellesley College 1987; PhD Cornell 1992 Kimble, John Wesley 1988 User Services Specialist Computing Services. BS Montana State 1965, MS 1974 Kimerling, A. Jon 1976 Prof Geosciences. BA Washington 1972; MS Wisconsin 1973, PhD 1976 Kimerling, R. Ann 1986 Faculty Res Asst Civil Engineering. BS Washington 1972 Kimura, Shoichi 1989 Assoc Prof Chemical Engineering. BE Osaka 1967; MS Oregon State 1976; PhD Osaka 1982 Kimzey, Lorina E 1989 Instr English Language Institute. BS Oregon State 1977; MA Western Oregon 1987 Kinch, Michael Paul 1969 Head of Reference Services & Prof, Kerr Library. BS Portland State 1968; MLS Washington 1969; MS Oregon State 1974 King, Charles Everett 1977 Prof Zoology, AB Emory 1958; MS Florida State 1960; PhD Washington 1965 King, David Burnett 1962 Prof History. BA Hamilton 1951; MA Rutgers 1955; PhD Cornell 1991 1962 Kennison, James 1988 Director of College King, Jonathan 1980 Assoc Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BA Antioch College 1965; MBA Programs Development Office. BA Eastern Washington 1958; MS Washington 1959; EdD Kentucky 1965 Kerber, Delmar David 1976 Event Manager Intercollegiate Athletics. BA Oregon State 1964, MA 1967 Kerkvliet, Joe R. 1988 Assoc Prof Economics. BA Montana 1981; PhD Wyoming 1986 Washington 1975, PhD 1980 King, Keith Irl 1970 Sr Instr Biology. BS Montana State 1963; MS Oregon State 1970 King, Laura L. H. 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Chemistry. BS Washington State 1983; MS UCBerkeley 1986; PhD North Carolina State 1992 King, Lynda Jeanne 1989 Assoc Prof German. BA USC 1971, MA 1973, PhD 1977 Faculty 330 Knight, Randall William 1984 Sr Faculty Res Asst Kopperman, Paul Edward 1978 Prof History. BA Crop & Soil Science. BS Oregon State 1973 Queens College 1966, MA 1969; PhD Illinois 1972 Koretsky, Milo David 1992 Asst Prof Chemical Engineering. BS UC-San Diego 1984, MS 1985; PhD UC-Berkeley 1991 Kosro, P. Michael 1984 Assoc Prof (Sr Res) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA UC-Santa Cruz 1973; MS Stanford 1977; PhD Scripps 1984 Kovac, David Carl 1991 Rec Sports Program Coordinator. BA UC-Berkeley 1978; ME Oregon Knittel, Laura M. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Zoology. BS Oregon 1992 Knittel, Marjorie Claire 1984 Instr & Education Librarian, Kerr Library. BS Western Oregon State 1959; MLib Washington 1962 Knothe, Carol Alicia 1972 Assoc Prof Malheur Co Extn. BS Nebraska 1962; MHEc Oregon State 1971 Knowe, Steven A. 1990 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Forest Science. BS Auburn 1977, MS 1980; PhD Georgia 1990 Koc, Cetin K. 1992 Asst Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. BS Istanbul Technical Univ (Turkey) 1980, MS 1982; MS UC-Santa Barbara 1985, PhD 1988 State 1985 Kovar, Richard Bowen 1983 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1982 Kramer, Brian William 1985 Instr Forest Engineering. BS Idaho State 1971; MF Oregon State Koch, John David 1988 Director Facilities Planning. BArch Cal Poly State 1974 Kocher, Carl Alvin 1973 Prof Physics. AB UCBerkeley 1963, PhD 1967 Kock, Jo Anne 1976 Assoc Prof & Staff Chair Sherman Co Extn; Wasco County Extn. BS Oregon State 1983, MA 1984 Koenig, Harold F. 1987 Asst Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BA Rochester 1980; MBA Nebraska 1982, PhD 1988 Koenitzer, Marilyn T. 1991 Inst English Lang Institute. BA San Jose State 1966; MEd Oregon State 1978 1977 1990 Kiser, James D. 1986 Sr Faculty Res Asst Forest Resources. BS Humboldt State 1982 Koepsell, Paul Arthur 1969 Prof Botany & Plant Pathology, Extn Plant Pathologist. BS UC-Davis 1962, PhD 1968 Kreowski, William B. 1992 Faculty Res Asst MidColumbia Ag Res Center. BS Virginia Polytechnic Inst & State U 1985; MS Washington State 1992 Kreth, Raymond D. 1987 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Reed College 1984; MS Oregon 1985 Krieger, Tillie 1992 Instr & Serials Catalog r- R ': G.{..=fiLf fit: Ai::f, Kingsley, Kenneth K. 1974 Dept Head (Interim) & Assoc Prof Ag. Communications. BA Kansas State 1964, MS 1973 Kirch, Thomas G. 1986 Director & Asst Prof Recreational Sports. BS Oregon 1975; MS U of Puget Sound 1980 Kircher, Anna E. 1991 Instructional Computing Coordinator College of Business. BS Oregon State Kitchen, James 1975, 1991 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Bloomsburg State; MS Oregon State 1978 Klein, Andrew Clifford 1985 Assoc Prof Nuclear Engineering. BS Penn State 1977; MS Wisconsin 1979, PhD 1983 Kleinsorge, Ilene K. 1987 Asst Prof Acctg & Info Mgmt. BS Emporia State 1981; PhD Kansas 1988 Klemke, Lloyd Walter 1970 Prof Sociology. BA UCLA 1963; MA Cal State-Northridge 1965; PhD Oregon 1969 Kliewer, Julie Elise 1985 Instr Forest Engineering. BSCE, BSFE Oregon State 1983 Kling, Donna Sirinek 1975 Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BS Bucknell 1964 Kling, Gerald Fairchild 1974 Assoc Prof Soil Science. BS Purdue 1968; MS Cornell 1973, PhD 1974 Klingeman, Peter Clayton 1966 Prof Civil Engineering. BS Northwestern 1957, MS 1959; PhD UC-Berkeley 1965 Klinkhammer, Gary 1990 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Minnesota 1972; MS Rhode Island 1977, PhD 1979 Klopsch, Mark W. 1980 Sr Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS Oregon State 1977, MS 1985 Knapp, Carolyn Sperry 1981 Faculty Res Asst Environmental Health Sciences Center. BA Northwestern 1960 Knapp, Steven John 1985 Assoc Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Nevada-Reno 1978, MS 1980; PhD Nebraska 1983 Knapp, Wallace H., Jr. 1986 Assoc Prof Student Health Center (Consultant). BA Indiana 1965, MD 1968 Koester, Ardis Williams 1974 Prof, Extn Textiles Clothing Specialist. BS Oregon State 1961; MSHE North Carolina- Greensboro 1971, PhD 1974 Kogan, Marcos 1991 Prof, Director of the Integrated Plant Protection Center. BS Universidade Rural do Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) 1961; PhD UCRiverside 1969 Krane, Kenneth Saul 1974 Dept Chair & Prof Physics. BS Arizona 1965; MS Purdue 1967, PhD 1970. Krantz, Gerald W. 1955 Dept Chair & Prof Entomology. BS Pittsburgh 1951, PhD Cornell 1955 Krause, Denise Rae 1989 Instr Speech Communication. BA Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo 1985; MA San Diego State 1987 Krause, Joseph T. 1988 Asst Prof French. BA Oregon State 1976; MA Michigan State 1979, PhD 1981 Librarian, Kerr Library. BA UCLA 1962; MLS 1964; PhD U of Illinois-Urbana 1981 Krisdhasima, Viwat 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Bioresource Engineering. BS Chulalongkom Univ (Thailand) 1985; MS Oregon State 1988, PhD 1991 Koike, Jun-Ichi 1991 Asst Prof Mechanical Kronstad, Warren Ervind 1959 Wheat Research Engineering. BEngr Tokyo Inst of Technology 1983, Chair; OSU Distinguished Prof; Plant Breeding & MEngr 1985; PhD Northwestern 1989 Genetics, Crop & Soil Science. BS Washington State Kolbe, Cheryl 1990 Instr Ag & Resource 1957, MS 1959; PhD Oregon State 1963 Economics. BA New Hampshire 1967 Krueger,James Harry 1961 Prof Chemistry. BS Kolbe, Edward Robert 1974 Prof Bioresource Wisconsin 1958; PhD UC-Berkeley 1961 Engineering. BME Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Krueger, Judith Crookham 1966 Sr Instr Music. BA 1964; MSE Case Western Reserve 1966; PhD New Hampshire 1975 Idaho 1957; MA Oregon State 1965 Koller, Duncan G. 1992 Prof & Colonel Aerospace Krueger, Sharon Kay 1990 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Wisconsin-Madison 1983, Studies. BS Oregon State 1969; MA Chapman College 1977; DEd USC 1992 MS 1984; PhD Oregon State 1990 Koller, Loren D. 1972, 1985 Dean & Prof College of Krueger, William Clement 1971-80,1981 Dept Head & ProfRangeland Resources. BS St Mary's Veterinary Medicine. DVM Washington State 1965; MS Wisconsin 1969, PhD 1971 College 1964; MS Humboldt State 1967; PhD Utah State 1970 Kollodge, Roberta L. Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Minnesota 1989 Kulas, Mary M. 1992 Asst Prof Nuclear Engineering. BS Wisconsin 1986, MS 1988, PhD Kolodziej, Terrie L. 1990 Project Coord Eastern & 1991 Central Europe Int'l Research & Development. BS Kulm, LaVerne Duane 1964 Prof Oceanic & Oregon State 1977; MS WOSC 1979 Atmospheric Sciences. BA Monmouth College Kolodziej, Wojciech J. 1980 Assoc Prof Electrical 1959; PhD Oregon State 1965 Engineering. MS Technical Warsaw (Poland) 1974; Kumar, Satish 1992 Res Assoc (Visiting) Forest PhD Oregon State 1980 Products. MS Panjab Univ (India) 1961; MS UCKomar, Paul Douglas 1970 Prof Oceanic & Berkeley 1970; PhD Garhwal Univ (India) 1983 Atmospheric Sciences. BA Michigan 1962, MS Kumaran, Santhosh 1991 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic (Math) 1963, MS (Geol) 1966; PhD UC-San Diego 1969 & Atmospheric Sciences. BTech Univ of Cochin Koong, Ling Jung (Kelvin) 1987 Dept Head & Prof (India) 1983; MS Brandeis 1988 Animal Sciences. BS Nat'l Taiwan 1964; MS North Carolina State 1968; PhD 1973 Faculty 14 Ladd, Linda Darmer 1988 Asst Prof Multnomah Co Extn. BA Texas-Arlington 1976; BS Portland State 1983, MS 1985; PhD Oregon State 1989 Ladd, Sheldon Lane 1985 Dept Head & Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Cal State-Fresno 1963; PhD UCDavis 1966 Lafi, Abd Younia 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Nuclear Engineering. BS Al-Mustansiriyah Univ (Iraq) 1976; MS Baghdad Univ 1978; PhD Oregon State 1991 LaFrance, David G. 1986 Assoc Prof History. BS Georgetown 1971; MA de las Americas (Mexico) 1977; MIS Indiana 1981, PhD 1984 Lakowske, Rise 1990 Head Women's Golf Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oregon State 1977 Landau, Rubin Harold 1974 Prof Physics. BS Cornell 1965; MS Illinois 1966, PhD 1970 Landgren, Chal Gordon 1979 Assoc Prof Columbia/Washington Co Extn. BS UC-Berkeley 1975; MS Utah State 1977; MBA Portland State 1989 Langdon, Christopher J. 1985 Asst Prof Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Edinburgh (UK) 1975; MS Wales 1977, PhD 1981 Langford, Charles Clinton 1970 Assoc Prof Sociology. BA Kansas State 1963, MA 1965; PhD Oregon 1971 Lanning, Kevin 1987 Assoc Prof Psychology. MA UC-Berkeley 1978, PhD 1986 Laramee, James Andre 1984 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Ag Chemistry. BS Cal State 1976; MS Purdue 1980, PhD 1980 Larison, James Roger 1978 Director Sea Grant Communications & Prof Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Cornell 1970; MS Wisconsin 1972 Larsen, Knud Sonderhede 1969 Prof Psychology. BA Cal State-Los Angeles 1964, MA 1966; PhD Brigham Young 1969 Larson, Ann Lindsay 1980 Instr English Language Institute. BA Scripps 1975; MA Utah 1976 Larson, Christopher 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Minnesota 1983 Larson, Erik W. 1980 Assoc Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BA Claremont Mens College 1974; PhD SUNY-Buffalo 1982 Larson, Larry L. 1984 Assoc Prof Rangeland Resources. BS Colorado State 1973, MS 1975, PhD 1978 Larwood, Lillian Louise 1988 Assoc Prof Lane County Extn. BS Oregon State 1968; MACE Washington State 1979 Lassen, E. Duane 1980 Assoc Prof Veterinary Medicine. DVM Iowa State 1972, PhD 1976, Dipl ACVP Lattin, John Daniel 1955 Prof Entomology. BS Iowa State 1950; MA Kansas 1951; PhD UCBerkeley 1964 Laver, Murray Lane 1969 Assoc Prof Forest Products. BSA Toronto 1955; PhD Ohio State 1959 Lawler, Barry 1978 Sr Instr English. BA Cal StateLong Beach 1968, MA 1971 Lawrence, Jeannine 1984 Faculty Res Asst Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Oregon State 1969, MS 1972 Lawrence, Karen E 1992 Faculty Res Asst Psychology. BA Oregon State 1992 331 BS Michigan State 1955, MS 1957; AMLS Michigan Leklem, James Erling 1975 Prof Nutrition & Food Mgmt. BS Wisconsin 1964, MS 1966, PhD 1973 LeMay, Morris Lee 1964 Director Counseling & Testing Center, University Exploratory Studies Program Director, Prof Education. BS McMurry College 1956; MA Colorado 1961; EdD Oregon 1964 1966 Lawson, David Cadden 1969 Assoc Prof Public Health. BS West Virginia 1963, MS 1966, EdD 1969 Lenihan, James M. 1992 Res Assoc (Acting) Botany Lawton, Stephen J. 1980 Assoc Prof Finance & Int'l Business. BA Southern Methodist 1973; MBA K.U.L. (Belgium) 1975; MBA Cornell 1975 1985 Lawrence, Robert Dale 1970 Assoc Prof Geosciences. BA Earlham College 1965; PhD Stanford 1968 Lawrence, Robert Elwood 197,4 Assoc Prof & Library Information Referral Service, Kerr Library. Layton, Robert Davis 1972 Prof Civil Engineering. BSCE Colorado State 1959; MSCE Kansas State 1965; PhD UC-Berkeley 1970 Leach, Thomas G. 1988 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1986 Leavitt, Ron J. 1988 Instr Speech Communication. BS Arizona 1976, MS 1978 Lebow, Stan Thomas 1986 Sr Faculty Res Asst Forest Products. BS Oregon State 1983, MS 1986 Lederer, Cindy L. 1986 Faculty Res Asst Food Science & Technology. BS Oregon State 1983 Lederman, Norman G. 1985 Assoc Prof Science & Math Education. BS Bradley 1971; MS New York 1973; MS Bradley 1977; PhD Syracuse 1983 Lee, Ben 1991 Asst Prof Elec & Computer Engineering. BE State Univ of New York; PhD Pennsylvania State 1991 Chiu-Chun 1992 Instr History. BA National Taiwan Univ 1973; MPhil Chinese Univ of Hong Kong 1976; MA Keio Univ (Japan) 1979; PhD Univ of Chicago 1992 Lee, Deanna M. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Radiation Center. BA Oregon 1987 Lee, Insook 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Electrical & Computer Engineering. BS Seoul National University 1983; MS Hawaii 1986; PhD UC-Davis Lee, 1990 Lee, Janet 1991 Director & Assoc Prof Women's Studies. BA Stirling Univ (Scotland); MA Washington State 1982, PhD 1985 Lee, John Walter 1969 Prof Mathematics. BS Stanford 1964, MS 1966, PhD 1969 Lee, Myoung-Ku 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Forest Products. BS Kangweon Nat'l Univ (Korea) 1981, MSc 1984; PhD Oregon State 1992 Lee, Phyllis S. 1991 Director Multicultural Affairs. BS WOSC 1957, MS Portland State 1970, PhD Oregon State 1983 Leeson, Theodore A. 1984 Sr Instr English. BA Marquette 1976, BS 1976; MA Virginia 1978, PhD 1984 Lehman, Gila 1991 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Oregon State 1988 Leibowitz, Flora Lynn 1977 Assoc Prof Philosophy. BA SUNY-Stony Brook 1969; MA Johns Hopkins 1975, PhD 1979 Leichti, Robert J. 1986 Assoc Prof Forest Products. BS Illinois 1974, MS 1977; PhD Auburn 1986, MS 1990 Leid, Mark E. 1992 Asst Prof Pharmacy. BS Washington State 1983; PhD Oregon State 1989 Leisy, Douglas Jerald 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Ag Chemistry. BS Oregon 1976; MS Iowa 1980; PhD Oregon State 1986 Leitner, Beate 1992 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Universitate (Germany) 1985; MS LLM (Germany) 1990 & Plant Pathology. BS Humboldt State 1978, MS Leno, Janice R. 1988 Chair & Asst Prof Josephine Co Ext Serv. BS South Dakota State 1961; MS Oklahoma State 1964 Leonard, Janet L. 1992 Assoc Prof (Sr Res) Pharmacy. BS Wisconsin-Madison 1974, PhD 1980 Leong, Jo-Ann C. 1975 Prof Microbiology. BA UCBerkeley 1964; PhD UC-San Francisco 1971 Lerner, Michael M. 1990 Asst Prof Chemistry. BA Pennsylvania 1983; PhD UC-Berkeley 1988 Lesser, Virginia M. 1992 Res Assoc Statistics. BS Lebanon Valley College 1980; MS North Carolina State 1987; PhD North Carolina 1991 Lev, Larry Steven 1984 Asst Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BA Wesleyan 1975; MS Michigan State 1981, PhD 1984 Levi, Shaul 1977 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS San Francisco 1964; MA UC-Berkeley 1966; PhD Washington 1974 Levien, Keith Lester 1985 Asst Prof Chemical Engineering. BS Iowa State 1970; BS Wisconsin 1975, PhD 1985 Levine, Murray David 1978 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA UC-Irvine 1972; PhD Washington 1979 Levy, Gad 1989 Asst Prof (Res Assoc/Sr Res) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BSc Hebrew 1980; MS Colorado State 1982; PhD Washington 1987 Lewis, Jon R. 1983 Assoc Prof English. BA Hobart & William Smith College 1977; MFA SUNY-Buffalo 1979; PhD UCLA 1983 Lewis, Margaret J. 1972 Asst Prof Lane County Extn Agent. BS Utah 1956; MS Oregon State 1972 Lewis, Osia 1991 Asst Football Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oregon State 1986, MS 1989 Lewis, Scott M. 1992 Asst Prof (Visiting) Mathematics. BA Northern Colorado 1976, MA 1980; PhD Oregon State 1986 Lewis, Theodore G. 1976 Prof Computer Science Engineering. BS Oregon State 1966; MS Washington State 1970, PhD 1971 Lieuallen, Thomas O. 1992 Instr Support Asst Electrical & Computer Engineering. BS Oregon State 1992 Lillie, Robert J. 1984 Assoc Prof Geosciences, Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Southwestern Louisiana 1975; MS Oregon State 1977; PhD Cornell 1984 Lindsey, Patricia J. 1988 Asst Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BA Cal State-Chico 1975; MA Cal StateHayward 1983; PhD UC-Davis 1987 Lisec, Robert 1989 Assoc Prof Polk Co Extn. BS Peru State College 1971; MS Nebraska 1980 Liss, Evelyn Arlene Engel 1983 Assoc Prof, Communication Specialist, Ag Communications. BA Oregon State 1975, MAIS 1984 Liss, William John 1977 Assoc Prof Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Penn State 1969; MS Oregon State 1974, PhD 1977 332 Faculty List, Peter Charles 1967 Assoc Prof Philosophy. BA Michigan State 1961, MA 1964, PhD 1969 Liston, Aaron Irving 1991 Director of Herbarium & Asst Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BS The Hebrew Univ (Jerusalem) 1982, MS 1984; PhD Lu, Shih-Lien 1991 Asst Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. BS UC-Berkeley; MS UC-Los Angeles, PhD 1990 Lubchenco, Jane 1976 Prof Zoology. BA Colorado 1969; MS Washington 1971; PhD Harvard 1975 Claremont 1990 Ludy, Robin L 1992 Faculty Res Asst Horticulture. Liu, Ben-Hui 1990 Res Assoc Crop & Soil Science. BS Southern Illinois 1985; MS Oregon State 1991 BS Henan Agric. Univ 1982; MS Kansas State 1987;Luebke, Douglas A. 1992 Instr Naval Science. PhD Oregon State 1990 Luna, John Michael 1992 Asst Prof & On-Farm Liu, Win G. 1992 Research Assoc (Post Doc) Res/Ext Proj Coordinator. BS Oregon State 1977; MS Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Nanjing Florida 1979; PhD Virginia Polytechnic Institute & Aeronautical Institute (China) 1983; PhD Beijing State U 1986 University (China) 1989; MS Portland State 1992 Lunch, William M. 1984 Assoc Prof Political Llewellyn, Ed 1989 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Science. BA UC-Riverside 1969; MA UC-Berkeley Atmospheric Sciences. BS Cal Inst of Tech 1987 1970, PhD 1976 Locke, Kerry A. 1985 Klamath Co Ext Agent, Asst Lundin, Fredrick M. 1985 Asst Prof & Staff Chair Prof. BA San Francisco State 1971; BS Colorado Morrow Co Extn. BS Nevada-Reno 1979, MS 1981 1978, MS 1980; PhD OSU 1991 Lundsten, Mary Jo 1992 Faculty Res Asst Crop & Loeb, Barbara E. 1984 Assoc Prof Art. BA SUNYSoil Science. BS Saint Louis Univ 1959; Oregon Buffalo 1969; MA Texas 1974; PhD Washington State 1989; MS Miami Univ 1963 1982 Lundy, James R. 1990 Asst Prof Civil Engineering. Loeffler, David A. 1992 Asst Prof Military Science. BS Oregon State 1984, MS 1986; PhD Texas-Austin BA Washington 1982 1990 Loeffler, Lorna J. 1987 Asst Prof Klamath Co Extn. Lunner, Marilyn Jeanne 1968 Assoc Prof & BS Montana State 1971; MS Missouri 1987 Chairman Clackamas Co Extn. BS Nebraska 1961; MA Portland State 1979 Loegering, Lisa 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Moorhead State 1987 Luo, Gang 1990 Res Assoc Oceanography & Loeser, John Garret 1988 Asst Prof Chemistry. BA Atmospheric Sciences. BS Beijing Univ 1982; PhD Princeton 1977; CPGS Cambridge 1978; MA Georgia Tech 1990 Harvard 1980, PhD 1984 Luoma, Daniel L. 1986 Res Assoc Forest Science. BS Oregon 1978 Loewinger, Howard Abraham 1992 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BA UC-Berkeley 1967 Logendran, Rasaratnam 1989 Asst Prof Industrial & Mfg Engineering.BS Sri Lanka 1975; MEng Asian Inst of Tech 1980; PhD Oklahoma State 1984 Lomax, Terri Lynn 1987 Assoc Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Washington 1975; MS San Diego State 1978; PhD Stanford 1983 Long, Lynn E. 1988 Staff Chairman, Asst Prof Wasco Co Extn. BS Lewis & Clark 1975; MS Washington State 1977 Long, Roderick J. 1991 Asst Football Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS New Mexico 1974 Longerbeam, Susan 1991 Assoc Director for Admin Svcs Student Health Center. BA UC-Santa Cruz 1984; MA Antioch Univ 1988 Loomis, Walter David 1953 Prof Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Iowa State 1948; PhD UC-Berkeley 1953 Lorz, Harriet V. 1972 Faculty Res Asst Microbiology. BS Oregon State 1964, MS 1967 Loudd, Richard C. 1992 Investigations Officer Affirmative Action. Love, Connie Sue 1985 Sr Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BS Wyoming 1981 Loveland, Patricia M. 1975 Sr Faculty Res Asst Food Science & Technology. BS Washington 1963 Loveland, Walter David 1967 Prof Chemistry, Radiation Center. SB MIT 1961; PhD Washington M Maas, Kathleen 1993 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science Res. BS Maryland 1990; MS Michigan State 1992 Machado, Craig M. 1990 Instr English Language Institute. BA UC-Davis 1974; MA San Francisco Malencik, Dean Anthony 1980 Res Assoc Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Notre Dame 1965; MS Cal Tech 1968; PhD Oregon State 1972 Mallery, Mike D. 1992 Info Resources Analyst Budgets & Planning. BS Oregon State 1988, MBA 1991 Malouf, Robert E. 1991 Director Oregon Sea Grant & Prof Fisheries & Wildlife. BA Montana 1968; MS Oregon State 1970, PhD 1977 Malueg, Sara Ellen 1966 Assoc Dean College of Liberal Arts, Prof French. BA Muskingum C 1954; MA Wisconsin 1957, PhD 1965 Magnello, Dennis 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Grove City College 1972; MS Oklahoma State 1985 Manlove, Anne Kathryn 1982 Asst Prof Jackson Co Extn. BS North Dakota State 1982; MS Southern Oregon Manning, Thomas 1991 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Calif State 1982; MS Minnesota 1988 Manoogian-O'Dell, Margaret 1992 Career Advisor Centralized Placement. BA UC-Santa Barbara 1981; MEd Vermont-Burlington 1984 Mansour, N. S. 1970 Extn Vegetable Crop Specialist, Prof Horticulture. BS Wisconsin-Stevens Point 1956; MS Wisconsin-Madison 1961; PhD Michigan State 1966 Manuelito-Kerkvliet C. 1988 Indian Education Coordinator Multicultural Affairs. BS Wyoming 1976, MS 1988 Maresh, Carolyn R. 1974 Asst to Dean-Administration College of Liberal Arts Maresh, Thomas Joseph 1967 Dean of Graduate School, Prof of Geography. BA Washington State 1962; PhD Illinois 1968 Marino, Deborah A. 1978 Instr English Language Institute. BA Ohio 1971; MEd Oregon State 1977 Maristany, Alberto G. 1986 Sr Faculty Res Asst Forest Products. BS Universidad Nacionalde Cordoba 1978; MS Idaho 1982; MS Oregon State State 1984 1986 Macnab, Alexander W. 1979 Asst Prof Wasco Co Markle, Frank Douglas 1985 Prof Fisheries & Extn. BS Oregon State 1975, MEd 1983 Maddalozzo, John G.F. 1988 Instr Exercise & Sport Science. BPE British Columbia 1979, BEd 1981; MS Eastern Washington 1988 Madden, Elva Louise 1978 Staff Chair (Interim) & Acting Instr Wheeler Co Extn Madsen, Victor Arviel 1963 Prof Physics. BS Washington 1953, PhD 1961 Magana, Mario Edgardo 1989 Asst Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. BSEE Iowa State 1979; MSEE Georgia Tech 1980; PhD Purdue 1987 Wildlife. BS Cornell 1969; MA William & Mary 1972, PhD 1976 Marks, Andrea S. 1992 Asst Prof Art. BFA Philadelphia College of Art 1983; MFA (Equivalent) Basel School of Design (Switzerland) 1989 Marks, Barbara Jean 1989 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BA UC-Santa Barbara 1977, MA 1981 Magnuson, Jerome Allyn 1987 Asst Prof Extension Service. BA, BS Oregon State 1985, MAg 1987 Mahrt, Larry 1972 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Wisconsin 1967, MS 1969, PhD 1972 Maki, Jeffery J. 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Physics. BS Lewis & Clark 1984; PhD Univ of Rochester Marks, James R. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Microbiology. BS Washington State 1986; MS Michigan State 1989 Marler, Bruce A. Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1992 Marlow, Daniel D. 1992 Asst Football Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BA Luther College 1988 Martens, Jay W. 1990 Instr Naval Science Martin, Ruth C. 1987 Faculty Res Asst Horticulture. BS Wisconsin- Madison 1985; MS Oregon State 1966 1992 1989 Lovell, Ronald Paul 1971 Assoc Prof English, Director of Public Affairs College of Liberal Arts. BA UCLA 1959, MS 1961 Makroglou, Athena 1992 Assoc Professor Martin, Sharon Lee 1980 Academic Adviser Mathematics. BS Univ of Athens (Greece) 1972; MS Univ of Manchester (England) 1974, PhD 1977 Maksud, Michael George 1980 Dean College of Health & Human Performance & Prof Exercise & Sport Science. BS Illinois 1955; MA Syracuse 1957; PhD Michigan State 1965 College of Business. BS Oregon State 1980, MBA Lowrie, Miriam Carlson 1971 Prof Polk Co Extn. BS North Dakota State 1968, MS 1971 Lowry, Robert Ronald 1962 Sr FacultyRes Asst Chemistry. BA Chico State 1953 1981 Martinez, Rebecca Lelack 1982 Asst Director & Instr Financial Aid. BS Oregon State 1981, MEd 1983 Martins-Filho, Carlos 1992 Asst Prof Economics. BS Fed Univ Cear-Brazil; MA Tennessee 1981, PhD 1992 Faculty Marry, Valerie 1992 Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BS Winona State Univ 1986 Mary-Lou 1986 Asst Prof Education. BA Massachusetts 1958; MS Oregon State 1982, PhD 1987 Mason, Robert George 1961 Prof Sociology & Project Director Survey Research Center. BS Oregon State 1951; MS Wisconsin 1952; PhD Stanford 1962 Mason, Robert T. 1991 Asst Prof Zoology. BA College of Holy Cross 1982; PhD Texas-Austin 1987 Mast, JoAnn M. 1990, Ext Agent 4-H Youth BS Oregon State 1974, EDM 1978 Matano, Ricardo 1990 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. Licenciado Univ Nac del Sur, Argentina 1983; MA Princeton 1988, PhD 1990 Mate, Bruce 1972 Prof Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Oregon 1968, PhD 1973 Mathany, Allan Riley 1975 Assoc Prof & Director Office of Budgets & Planning. BS Oregon State 1963, MBA 1971 Mathews, Catherine Z. 1978 Faculty Res Asst Food Science & Technology. BS UC-Berkeley 1958 Mathews, Christopher K. 1978 OSU Distinguished Prof & Dept Chair of Biochemistry & Biophysics. BA Reed 1958; PhD Washington 1962 Matsumoto, Masakazu 1975 Prof Veterinary Medicine. DVM Hokkaido Uapan) 1964; MS Hawaii 1966; PhD UC-Davis 1972, Dipl ACVM Mattes, Lisa C. 1990 Director of Development, College of Forestry. BS Idaho 1980 Mattoon, John S. 1991 Asst Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS Oregon State 1981; DVM 1984; Dipl ACVR Mattson, Donald Eugene 1965 Assoc Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS UC-Davis 1957, DVM 1959; PhD Washington State 1966 Matylonek, John C. 1992 Instr Kerr Library. BA Western Michigan Univ 1988; MA Michigan 1989 Matzke, Mary Ann 1987 Advising Specialist College of Science. BS Oklahoma State 1972; MS Syracuse 1973 Matzke, Gordon Edwin 1977 Assoc Dept Chair Geosciences & Assoc Prof of Geography. BA Valparaiso 1966; MS Oklahoma State 1971; PhD Syracuse 1975 Maughan, Laurel Smith 1972 Assoc Prof & Reference Librarian, Kerr Library. BA Utah State 1968; MLS Pittsburgh 1972, MA 1973; MA Oregon 1980 Maul, Jerry Lee 1986 Asst Prof Douglas Co Extn. BS Kearney State 1977; MS Oregon State 1980 McAlexander, James H. 1990 Asst Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BA Brigham Young 1981; PhD Utah 1987 McAlexander, Kim 1992 Advising Coordinator Home Economics & Education. BS Brigham Young 1990 McCabe, Rachelle 1984 Asst Prof Music. BM Washington 1977; MMJuilliard 1979; DMA Michigan 1984 McCann, Kevin Lee 1983 Instr & Assoc Director of Alumni Relations. BS Oregon State 1977 McClenaghan, William Andrew 1949 Prof Political Science. BA Washington 1948 McClouskey, Andy D. 1989 Asst Men's Basketball Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oregon State 1982 McCluskey, Rebecca Lynn 1989 Faculty Res Asst Horticulture. BS Oregon State 1985 McComb, William C. 1987 Assoc Prof Forest Science. BS Connecticut 1974, MS 1976; PhD Louisiana State 1979 McConnell, Michelle L. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Marine Science Center. BS Oregon State 991 McCoy, Rodney D. 1990 Assoc Prof Douglas Co Extn. BS Idaho, MS 1980 McCreight, Keith Russell 1971 Director & Asst Prof Financial Aid. BS Nebraska 1965, MA 1967; PhD Oregon State 1981 McCreight, Richard W. 1982 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. AA Pasadena City College 1969; BS California 1979; MS Oregon State 1983 McCubbin, Jeffrey Allen 1988 Assoc Prof Exercise & Sport Science. BS East Stroudsburg State 1976; MA Connecticut 1977; PhD Virginia 1983 McCullough, Brenda Gayle 1981 Sr Instr. BA Berea 1963; MA Ohio 1965 McCune, Bruce 1987 Asst Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BA Montana-Missoula 1974, MA 1979; PhD Wisconsin-Madison 1982 McDaniel, Mina R. 1983 Prof Food Science & Technology. BS Oregon State 1967, MS 1968; PhD Massachusetts 1974 McDonald, Edward 1992 Asst Prof Art. AOCA Ontario College of Art (Canada) 1983; MFA Cranbrook Academic of Art (Canada) 1985 McDougal, William G. 1981 Prof Civil Engineering, Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Humboldt State 1976; MCE Delaware 1977; PhD Oregon State 1981 McDowell, Edward David 1974 Assoc Prof Industrial & Mfg Engineering. BS Ohio State 1965; MS Ohio 1970; PhD Ohio State 1974 McEvoy, Peter Bens 1976 Assoc Prof Entomology. BA Amherst 1971; PhD Cornell 1977 McEwan, Barbara 1990 Asst Prof Education. BEd Univ of Toledo 1969; EdD Oregon State 1987 McFadden, Philip N. 1990 Asst Prof Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Texas (El Paso) 1979; PhD UCLA 1983 McFarlane, Dale Donald 1965 Prof Finance & Int'l Business. BA Washington 1960, MBA 1961; DBA Indiana 1966 McGarigal, Kevin 1992 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science Research. BS Virginia Polytechnic Inst. & State Univ 1983; MS Oregon State 1988 McGinty, John Charles 1984 Instr Educational Opportunities. BS Oregon State 1980, MS 1984 McGrath, Daniel Morton 1983 Assoc Prof Marion/Polk/Yamhill Co Extn. BS UC-Davis 1980, MS 1982 McGuire Joseph 1987 Assoc Prof Bioresource Engineering. BChe Georgia Tech 1980; MS North Carolina State 1983, PhD 1987 Mcllvenna, Don Edward 1965 Assoc Prof History. AB Sacramento State 1952; MA UC-Berkeley 1956; PhD Stanford 1966 McInnis, Michael Lindsay 1986 Assoc Prof Rangeland Resources. BS Humboldt State 1973; MS Oregon State 1977, PhD 1985 McIntire, Charles David 1964 Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BBA Southern Methodist 1954; BS Oregon State 1958, MS 1960, PhD 1964 McIntyre, David Hampton 1989 Asst Prof Physics. BS Arizona 1980; MS Stanford 1984, PhD 1987 333 McKee, Walter Arthur 1977 Site Director H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest, Forest Science. BS Maine 1967; PhD Georgia 1971 McLain, Thomas Ernest 1992 Dept Head & Prof Forest Products. BS Colorado State 1969, MS 1973, PhD 1975 McLaughlin, James 1987 Instr Acctg & Info Mgmt. BS Oregon 1974, MBA Oregon State 1987 McMullen, B. Stan 1980 Prof Economics. BA SUNY-Stony Brook 1973; MA UC-Berkeley 1976, PhD 1979 McNamara, Marion C. 1990 Faculty Res Asst International R & D. BA Arizona State 1977 McNees, Ralph Edward 1979 Asst Prof & Director of Publications Forestry. BA Arkansas State 1962 McNeil, William J. 1980 Prof Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Oregon State 1952, MS 1956; PhD Washington 1962 McNeilan, Ray Arthur 1958-71, 1977 Prof Multnomah Co Extn. BS New Mexico State 1957; MS Oregon State 1958 McFarland, Reginald H. 1968 Res Assoc Center for Gene Research. BS Cal Tech 1965; PhD Oregon State 1968 McQuate, Robert S. 1986 Prof Exec Director Advanced Science & Technology Institute. BS Lebanon Valley 1969; PhD Ohio State 1973 McWilliams, David Alan 1987 Faculty Res Asst, Marine Operations Coordinator, Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS US Merchant Marine Academy 1978 Mead, Clifford S. 1986 Head of Collection Services & Special Collections & Asst Prof, Ken Library. BA Utica 1975; MLS Syracuse 1977 Meeker, Benjamin Scott 1990 Asst Prof Naval Science. BA Washington State 1984 Mehlenbacher, Shawn Albert 1986 Assoc Prof Horticulture. BS Penn State 1978; PhD Cornell 1982 Meints, Russel H. 1988 Director of Center for Gene Research, Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BA Macalester 1960; MS Kent State 1962, PhD 1965 Mellbye, Mark Edward 1986 Asst Prof Extension. BS Oregon State 1973, MS 1980 Menge, Bruce Allan 1976 Prof Zoology. BA Minnesota 1965; PhD Washington 1970 Menino, Jane Susan W. 1987 Faculty Res Asst Zoology. AAS New Hampshire 1980; BS Oregon State 1987 RM Faculty Merino, Alfred R., Jr. 1984 Assoc Prof Animal Sciences. BA Hawaii 1976; MS Washington State 1978, PhD 1981 Meredith, Charlotte 1988 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Lawrence 1967; MS Stanford 1971 Merickel, Mark 1991 Asst Prof Education. BA Cal State-Fresno 1972, MA 1985; PhD Oregon State 1991 Merrifield, Kathryn Jean 1990 Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Oregon State 1973, MS 1990 Merrill, Gary Frederic 1984 Assoc Prof Biochemistry & Biophysics. BA Ohio State 1973; PhD Syracuse 1977 Messersmith, Ann M. 1978 Asst Head & Assoc Prof Nutrition & Food Mgmt. BS Muskingum 1959; MS Michigan State 1970; PhD Missouri-Columbia 1975 Meyer, Howard H. 1983 Assoc Prof Animal Sciences. BS Minnesota 1967, MS 1969; PhD UCDavis 1972 Meyer, Marian 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Northwestern 1978; MBA Loyola (Chicago) 1980; PhD Arizona State 1990 Miller, Robert N. 1987 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. AB Brown 1971; MSc Cal Tech 1972; PhD UC-Berkeley 1976 Miller, Roger J. 1982 Faculty Res Asst Animal Sciences. BS Wyoming 1971 Miller, Ronald L. 1987 Dept Chair & Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BA Syracuse 1957; MA Pennsylvania 1964, PhD 1969 Miller, Stanley Frank 1973 Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BS Brigham Young 1960; MS Utah State 1962; PhD Oregon State 1965 Miller, Terry L. 1970 Assoc Prof Extn Entomology. BA San Diego State 1964, MS 1965; PhD Oregon State 1969 Miller, Thomas H. 1989 Asst Prof Civil Engineering. BS Cornell 1980, ME 1981, PhD 1989 Miller, Tomas A. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Food Science & Technology. BS Washington 1990 Mills, Dallice 1. 1976 Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Wisconsin State 1961; MS Syracuse 1964; PhD Michigan State 1969 Mills, Randall R. 1984 Assoc Prof Umatilla Co Extn. BS Washington State 1977, MS 1979 Milota, Michael R. 1988 Asst Prof Forest Products. BS Iowa State 1978; MS Oregon State 1981, PhD Michael, Robert Emerson 1968 Assoc Prof Exercise 1984 & Sport Science. BS North Central College 1962; MS Miner, John Ronald 1972 Prof Bioresource Northern Illinois 1966; EdD Oregon 1972 Engineering. BS Kansas 1959; MSE Michigan 1960; Micheals, Nancy Jean 1987 Faculty Res Asst Food PhD Kansas State 1967 Science & Technology. BS Oregon State 1981, MS 1985 Michel, Frank Clifford 1970 Assoc Prof & Counselor, Counseling Center. BS Washington State 1961; MEd Arkansas 1967; EdD Washington State 1974 Middleton, Barbara Anne 1985 Instr Forest Resources, Forestry Education Program. BS East Stroudsburg State College 1976; MS Penn State 1981 Mielke, Eugene A. 1984 Prof Horticulture, Superintendent Mid-Columbia Ag Research & Extension Center. BS Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo 1969; MS Mich State 1970, PhD 1974 Miles, Stanley Donovan 1966 Assoc Prof, Extn Economist. BS North Dakota State 1965; MS Oregon State 1971 Miller, Anita Nina 1986 Assoc Prof Horticulture. BS Maryland 1981, MS 1983, PhD 1986 Miller, Charles Benedict 1970 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Carleton 1963; PhD Scripps 1969 Miller, Donald A. 1991 Asst Prof Military Science. BS Indiana 1987 Miller, Jeffery Clark 1979 Prof Entomology. BS UC-Davis 1973, PhD 1977 Miller, Karen Illman 1984 Res Assoc Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS San Diego State 1969; MA Oregon State 1972, PhD 1980 Miller, Lorraine Theresa 1966 Prof Nutrition & Food Mgmt. BS Wisconsin 1953, MS 1958, PhD 1967 Miller, Michael J. 1990 Assoc Director Communication Media Center. BS Northwestern 1975, MFA 1980 Miller, Richard Frank 1977 Prof Rangeland Resources, Eastern Oregon Ag Research Center at Squaw Butte & Union. BS Cal State-Humboldt 1972; MS Oregon State 1974; PhD New Mexico State-Las Cruces 1977 Minoura, Toshimi 1982 Assoc Prof Computer Science Engineering. BS Tokyo 1968, MS 1970; PhD Stanford 1980 Miranda, Cristobal L. 1977 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Ag Chemistry. DVM Univ Philippines 1959; MS Virginia Poly 1971, PhD 1974 Mirosh, Larry Wayne 1986 Sr Faculty Res Asst Animal Sciences. BS Washington State 1964; MS Oregon State 1966 Mitchell, Alan 1990 Asst Prof Crop & Soil Science, Central Oregon Exp Station. BS Utah State 1983, MS 1984; PhD UC-Riverside 1990 Mitchell, Gregg F. 1979 Assoc Prof Clackamas Co Extn. BS Arizona 1969, MS 1979 Mitchell, Richard G., Jr. 1980 Assoc Prof Sociology. BA Cal State-Los Angeles 1970; MA USC 1974, PhD 1980 Mix, Alan C. 1984 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Washington 1978; MS Columbia 1980, MPhil 1984 Mix, Michael Cary 1970 Chair Biology Program & Prof Zoology. BS Washington State 1963; PhD Washington 1970 Moate, Thomas F. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BS Idaho 1991 Mobley, Ronald T. 1968 Assoc Prof & Superintendent/Chair North Willamette Res. & Extn. Center. BS Oregon State 1967, MEd 1975 Moffett, Michael H. 1985 Assoc Prof Finance & Int'l Business. BA Texas- Austin 1977; MS Colorado State 1979; MA Colorado 1983, PhD 1985 Mohd, Azizah B. Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BS UC-Davis 1978, MS 1981 Mohler, Ronald Rutt 1972 Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. BS Penn State 1956; MS USC 1958; PhD Michigan 1965 Mok, David W. S. 1975 Prof Horticulture. BSc National Taiwan 1967; MSc Guelph 1970; PhD Wisconsin 1975 Mok, Machteld C. 1975 Prof Horticulture. BS Wageningen (The Netherlands) 1969; MS Wisconsin 1973, PhD 1975 Moldenke, Alison Feerick 1980 Res Assoc Entomology. BA Wellesley College 1964; MA Wesleyan 1966; PhD Stanford 1973 Moldenke, Andrew Ralph 1983 Res Assoc Entomology. BA Wesleyan 1966; PhD Stanford 1971 Molina, Janet L. 1987 Substance Abuse Prev Spcl. Student Health Cntr. BA US-Santa Barbara 1972; MS Oregon State 1987 Montemayor, Oscar H. 1988 Counselor Educational Opportunites. BA Oregon State 1987 Montgomery, Peter L. 1992 Asst Prof (Visiting) Mathematics. BA UC-Berkeley 1969, MA 1971; PhD UC-Los Angeles 1992 Moon, Barbara J. 1985 Assoc Director Continuing Higher Education. BS Oregon State 1969 Moore, Daniel Louis 1979 Sr Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BA Indiana StateEvansville 1976; MS Purdue 1979 Moore, Frank Ludwig 1975 Prof Zoology. BA Wooster 1967; MA Colorado 1974, PhD 1974 Moore, James A. 1979 Prof Bioresource Engineering, Extn Ag Engineer. BS Cal Poly 1962; MS Arizona 1964; PhD Minnesota 1975 Moore, Kathleen Dean 1975 Depart Chair & Assoc Prof Philosophy. BA Wooster 1969; MA Colorado 1971, PhD 1977 Moore, Larry Wallace 1969 Prof Plant Pathology. BS Idaho 1962, MS 1964; PhD UC-Berkeley 1970 Moore, Marilyn Jean 1976 Instr Extension. BS Oregon State 1975 Moore, Mark Paul 1990 Asst Prof Speech Communication. BA Cal State- Fresno 1976; MA Cal State-Hayward 1980; PhD Indiana 1984 Moore, Mike David 1985 Sr Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BS Colorado State 1985 Moore, Stanley A., Jr. 1973 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Michigan 1968; MS Florida State 1972 Moore, Sylvia Lee 1966 Director of Univ Marketing, Conferences, & Spec Events, Assoc Prof Exercise & Sport Science. BS Washington 1963; MS Oregon 1966, PhD 1980 Moore, Thomas Carrol 1963 Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BA North Texas State 1956; MA Colorado 1958, PhD 1961 Moran, Patricia B. 1989 Asst Prof Human Development & Family Sciences. BA Minnesota 1979; JD Oregon Law School 1983; MA Cornell 1987, PhD 1989 Morandi, Thomas 1986 Prof Art. BS Indiana (Pennsylvania) 1966; MFA Ohio Univ 1971 Morey, Ann 1989 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Minnesota 1985 Morford, Shawn R. 1991 Asst Prof Marion Cty Extn. BS Michigan State 1981; MAg Oregon State 1990 Morgan, Stephen C. 1987 Asst Prof Curry Co Extn. BA Cal State-Northridge 1973; BS Cal Poly 1979, MS 1981 Morgan, Stephen C. 1987 Asst Prof Washington Co Extn. BA Cal State-Northridge 1973; BS Cal Poly 1979, MS 1981 Morgan, Thomas D. 1988 Director Upward Bound. BA Washington 1974; MS Oregon State 1986 Faculty 335 Morrell, Jeffrey Joseph 1983 Assoc Prof Forest Muckleston, Keith Way 1964 Assoc Dept Chair Murphy, Lea Frances 1980 Assoc Prof Products. BS SUNY- Syracuse 1977; MS Penn State 1979; PhD SUNY 1981 (Acting) & Prof Geosciences. BA Washington 1960, MA 1963, PhD 1970 Muir, Patricia S. 1987 Asst Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BA Montana-Missoula 1975; PhD Wisconsin-Madison 1984 Mukatis, W. Alfred 1980 Assoc Prof Finance & Int'l Business. BS Northwestern 1960; PhD Cal Tech 1965; JD Illinois 1976 Mathematics. BA Temple 1976; PhD CarnegieMellon 1980 Murphy, Rochelle M. 1987 Advising Specialist College of Science. BA Connecticut 1959; MEd Oregon State 1990 Mull, Jeffrey C. 1983 Physician Student Health Center. BS Allegheny College 1976; MD Pittsburgh State 1986 1980 Poly SLO 1981;MS Oregon State 1988 Murray, Thomas F. 1990 Prof Pharmacy. BS North Texas State 1971; PhD Washington 1979 Murtaugh, Paul A. 1992 Asst Prof Statistics. BA Morris, John Edward 1968 Dept Chair & Prof Zoology. BA Stanford 1958; MS Hawaii 1960; PhD UCLA 1966 Morris, Richard Andrew 1986 Prof Crop & Soil Science & Int'l Research & Development. BS Cornell 1966, MS Cornell 1968; PhD Iowa State 1972 Morris, Robert James, Jr. 1965 Assoc Prof Geosciences. BS U.S. Military Academy 1954; MGE (Geological) Oklahoma 1961, PhD 1965 Morrison, Betty J. 1983 Assoc Prof Washington Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1952; MS Portland State 1983 Morrissey, Michael Thomas 1990 Director Coastal Oregon Marine Exp Station-Astoria, Assoc Prof Food Science & Technology,. BS Notre Dame 1970; MS Wisconsin 1977; PhD Oregon State 1982 Morrow, Alice Mills 1980 Prof Extn Family Economics Specialist. BS Massachusetts 1962; MA Michigan State 1965; JD Louisville 1973 Mosbaugh, Dale William 1989 Assoc Prof Ag Chemistry. BA Cincinnati 1975, PhD 1979 Moser, John Christian 1979 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Dickinson 1971; MS Oregon State 1979 Mosier, Nola Jean 1985 Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Oregon State 1984 Mosley, Alvin Ray 1978 Assoc Prof Crop & Soil Science. BA Kentucky 1965, MS 1968; PhD Oregon State 1972 Moss, Dale Nelson 1977 Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Ricks College 1956; MS Cornell 1956, PhD 1959 Mosser, Valerie A. 1990 Faculty Res Asst Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Washington State 1985 Mourn, James Norman 1984 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BASc Toronto 1978, MASc 1979; PhD British Columbia 1984 Mpitsos, George J. 1989 Prof (Sr Res) Pharmacy. BS Michigan 1963; PhD Virginia 1969 Mullens, Jo Beth 1992 Faculty Res Asst Water Resources Res. Institute. BS Central Arkansas 1986; MS Southern Illinois 1989 Mulligan, M. Kathleen 1988 Director of Facilities Mgmt (Acting). BA Memphis State 1973, MPA 1974 Mulrooney, Donna M. 1988 Faculty Res Asst Crop Murphy, Thomas A. 1963-66, 1968 Assoc Prof Psychology & Director Human Services Program. BA Michigan State 1959, MA 1961; MSW Portland Murray, Helene 1988 LISA Project Associate. BS Cal Cornell1976; PhD Washington 1981, 1989 Musser, Gary Loren 1972 Prof Mathematics. BS Michigan 1961, MS 1963; PhD Miami (Florida) & Soil Science. BS Oregon State 1987 1970 Mumaw, Catherine R. 1987 Assoc Prof Human BS Eastern Development & Family Sciences. Mennonite 1954; MS Penn State 1958, PhD 1967 Mullen, John W. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Forest Myrold, David Douglas 1984 Assoc Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Michigan Technological 1977; MS Washington State 1979; PhD Michigan State 1984 Science. BS Evergreen State College 1982; MS Arizona 1986 Munar, Myrna Y. 1988 Asst Prof Pharmacy. BA Southern California 1981, PharmD 1985 Mumford, Margaret S. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Boise State 1985 Mundt, Christopher Charles 1985 Assoc Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Cornell 1979; MS Iowa State 1981; PhD North Carolina State 1985 Munro, Alan A. 1962 Prof Art BA George Peabody 1952; MFA Wichita State 1956 Munroe, Dennis A. 1992 Aquatic Center Coordinator. BS Walla Walla College 1972; MS U of Dayton 1975 Murphy, Allan H. 1979 Prof (Sr Res) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS MIT 1954; MA Michigan 1963, PhD 1974 Murphy, Christopher Francis 1987 Faculty Res Asst Entomology. BS Oregon State 1982, MS 1988 Nabelek, John Ludvik 1987 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS MIT 1974, MS 1975, PhD 1984 Naffziger, Ken G. 1971 Asst Prof & Counselor, Counseling Center. BA Carthage 1958; MA Moorhead State 1964; PhD Oregon 1971 Nakaue, Harry Sadao 1975 Prof Animal Sciences. BS Cal State Poly 1959; MS Arizona 1963, PhD 1966 Neeley-Brown, Michael Don 1981 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1975, BS 1979 Nelson, David M. 1977 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. AB Dartmouth 1969; PhD Alaska 1975 Nelson, Peter Oliver 1975 Assoc Prof Civil Engineering. BS Cornell 1968, MS 1972, PhD 1975 Nelson, Sheila 1991 Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BA Kansas State 1961, MS 1963; MS Oregon State 1991 Ness, Gordon Everett 1969 Res Assoc Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Cal State-Hayward 1969; MS Oregon State 1982, PhD 1982 Nesse, Philip E. 1989 Asst Prof & Staff Chair Agrucultural\4-H Youth Extn. BA Minnesota 1971, BS 1978, MS 1986 Nesson, Michael H. 1981 Res Assoc Biochemistry & Biophysics. SB MIT 1960; PhD Cal Tech 1969 Newberger, Priscilla Anne 1981 Res Assoc Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS MIT 1964; Oregon State 1981 Newberger, Stuart Marshall 1969 Assoc Prof Mathematics. BEE City College of New York 1960; PhD MIT 1964. Newcomb, Gene B. 1976 Res Assoc Botany & Plant Pathology. BA UC-Berkeley 1952, PhD 1962 Newton, Michael 1960 Prof Forest Science. BS Vermont 1954; BS Oregon State Univ 1959, MS 1960, PhD 1964 Newton, Robert L. 1968 Director (Interim) Business Affairs. BS Oregon State 1952 Neyhart, Charles Amos, Jr. 1973 Dept Chair & Prof Acctg & Info Mgmt. BS Penn State 1968, MBA 1969, PhD 1973 `41 336 Faculty Nibler, Joseph William 1967 Prof Chemistry. BS Oregon State 1963; PhD UC-Berkeley 1966 Nice, Karl Jacob 1969 Asst Prof Education. BS Indiana State 1959, MS 1965; PhD Iowa 1969 Nickell, Danny L. 1991 Asst Prof/Umatilla Cty Extension Agent. BS Cal State - Fresno 1979, MS Olsen, Christina L. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Forest Engineering. BS UC-Berkeley 1968 Olsen, Eldon Dale 1976 Assoc Prof Forest Engineering. BS Utah 1966; MS Montana State 1969; PhD Oregon State 1979 Olsen, Jeffery Lynn 1983 Assoc Prof Yamhill Co Page, Cynthia L. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BS New Mexico 1982 Pahl, Janet Maurene 1976 Asst Prof Extn Agent Clatsop Co Extn. BS Kearney State College 1968; MS Oregon State 1982 1981 Extn. BS Washington State 1981; MS Oregon State Nielsen, James Frederick 1974 Prof Finance & Int'l Business. BME General Motors Institute 1967; MBA Colorado 1969, DBA 1972 Nielsen, Roger L. 1988 Assoc Prof (Sr Res) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Arizona 1976, MS 1978; PhD Southern Methodist 1983 Nielson, Norma L. 1985 Prof Finance & Int'l Business. BS Northwest Missouri State 1974; MA Pennsylvania 1977, PhD 1979 Niem, Alan Randolph 1970 Assoc Prof Geosciences. BS Antioch 1966; MS Wisconsin 1969, PhD 1971 Niemiec, Stanley Southworth 1987 Sr Faculty Res Asst Forest Products. BA Southern Illinois 1975; MS Penn State 1979 Niess, Margaret Louise 1980 Assoc Prof Science & Math Education. BS Oregon State 1965, MS 1966, PhD 1981 Nieukirk, Sharon L. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Marine Branch Station. BS Guilford College 1981; MS Oregon State 1992 Nishihara, Janet Seiko 1983 Instr, Counselor/Academic Coordinator Educational Opportunities. BS Oregon State 1978, MEd 1983 1983 BS North Dakota 1990; MA South Dakota 1992 Palfrey; Kennard Miller, Jr. 1981 Marine Superintendent Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS US Coast Guard Academy 1956; MS Washington Nishiyama, Kazuo 1991 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Kyushu (Japan) 1980, MS 1982, PhD 1989 Osborne, Owen D. 1990 Assoc Director Extension Service. BS Missouri 1966; MS Oklahoma State 1967, PhD 1972 Osheroff, Shiela Keil 1984 Asst Prof & Serials Librarian, Kerr Library. BA U of Puget Sound 1968; MS Washington 1969; EdM Oregon State 1988 Osis, Vicki Jean 1971 Assoc Prof, Extn Marine Education Specialist. BS Southwest Missouri State 1965; MA Missouri 1968 Ossiander, Mina 1988 Asst Prof Mathematics. BA Washington 1978, MS 1982, PhD 1985 Oughton, Julie A. 1977 Sr Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BS Washington State 1970 Overton, Walter Scott 1965 Prof Statistics. BS Virginia Poly 1948, MS 1950; PhD North Carolina Nolan, Mary Lee 1973 Prof Geosciences. BA Louisiana State 1957; MA Sam Houston State 1963; MA Texas 1967; PhD Texas A & M 1972 Norris, Logan A. 1961 Dept Head & Prof Forest Science. BS Oregon State 1961, MS 1964, PhD 1970 Nuckton, Carole Frank 1990 Assoc Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BA Stanford 1956; MA San Jose State 1960; MS UC-Davis 1976, PhD 1986 Nunn, Mary Ellen 1989 Faculty Res Asst Research Office 0 O'Connor, J. Jerry 1970 Asst Dean of Student Svcs College of Liberal Arts. BA Loras 1958; MA Mt St Marys 1963; EdD U of Pacific 1970 O'Malley, Robert 1986 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS U of Puget Sound 1979; MS Washington 1981 O'Sullivan, Arthur 1992 Assoc Prof Economics. BS Oregon; PhD Princeton 1981 Obermiller, Frederick William 1974 Extn Economist. Prof Rangleland Resources. BA Missouri 1966, PhD 1969 Oehler, Nellie Joan 1964, 1988 Asst Prof Lane County Extn Agent. BS Oregon State 1964 Oester, Paul Thomas 1980 Assoc Prof & Staff Chair Union Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1972, MS 1977 Ohvall, Richard A. 1976 Dean & Prof Pharmacy. BS Wisconsin 1953, MBA 1959, PhD 1962 Olcott, Donald J. 1989 Instr, Asst Director for Extended Lrng, Continuing Higher Ed. BA Western Washington 1981, MEd 1986 Olsen, Pamela Sue 1987 Asst Prof Yamhill Co Extn Agent. BS North Dakota State 1983; MS Minnesota 1987 Painter, Kara 1992 Faculty Res Asst EORC-Bums. 1967 Olson, Geraldine I. 1975 Assoc Prof Human Pampush, Jonathan P. 1990 Fac Res Asst Ag & Res Development & Family Sciences. BS Wisconsin 1961; MS Cornell 1965; PhD Ohio State 1975 Olson, Jon 1990 Acting Director & Instr Center for Writing & Learning. BA Andrews 1977; MA USC 1979, PhD 1988 Olson, Kathryn M. 1987 Asst Prof Music. BA Pacific Lutheran 1975; MM Westminster Choir College 1984 Olson, Robert Eldon 1968 Assoc Prof (Sr Res) Fisheries & Wildlife. BA Concordia 1962; MS Montana State 1964, PhD 1968 Oriard, Michael Vincent 1976 Prof English. BA Notre Dame 1970; PhD Stanford 1976 Orzech, Miriam W. 1965 Academic Affairs (Special Programs), Prof. BA UC-Berkeley 1953; MA Oregon State 1969, PhD 1974 Economics. BS Oregon State 1987 Pancake, Cherri M. Assoc Prof Computer Science Engineering. BS Cornell 1971; PhD Auburn Univ Osborne, Judith L. 1992 Asst Prof Education. BS Parker, Lisa M. 1981 Faculty Res Asst Environmental Health Sciences Center. BS Oregon Missouri 1965; BS Oklahoma State 1968, MS 1969, DEd 1971 State 1964 Oviatt, Robert L. 1985 Fitness Director Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Alabama 1980; ME Mississippi 1982 Owen, Charles K. 1992 Asst Crew Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oregon State 1992 Owen, Sydney John Thomas 1975 Dean College of Engineering, Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. BSc Nottingham (England) 1957, PhD 1961 Owston, Constanee Jean 1981 Faculty Res Asst Food Science & Technology. BS Michigan 1963 0 Paasch, Robert Kenneth 1990 Asst Prof Mechanical Engineering. BS Cal Poly 1976; MS UCDavis 1981; PhD UC-Berkeley 1990 Pabst, Robert J. 1985 Sr Faculty Res Asst Forest Resources. BS Minnesota 1978, MS 1983 Padman, Laurence 1986 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BSc Sydney 1981, MS 1983, PhD 1986 1986 Pandelova, Iovanna G. 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Moscow State Univ 1985, PhD 1991 Park, Jae Won 1992 Asst Prof Marine Branch Station. BS Kon-Kuk Univ (Korea) 1980; MS Ohio State 1982: PhD North Carolina State 1985 Parker, Donald E. 1991 Sara Hart Kimball Dean & Prof College of Business. BA Oklahoma 1957; MS George Washington 1966; PhD Cornell 1975 Parker, Jill E. 1991 Asst Prof Veterinary Medicine. BA S Florida 1978; VMD Pennsylvania 1983, Dipl ACVS State 1981 Parks, Harold Raymond 1977 Prof Mathematics. AB Dartmouth 1971; PhD Princeton 1974 Parks, T. Dawn 1987 Faculty Res Asst Microbiology. BS North Carolina State 1980, MS 1985 Parnell, Dale 1992 Prof Education. BA Willamette 1951; MEd Oregon 1956, DEd 1964 Parrott, Keith A. 1984 Head Adviser & Assoc Prof Pharmacy. BS Idaho State 1970; Pharm D Kentucky 1976 Parsons, Gary Lee 1988 Faculty Res Asst Entomology. BS Cal Poly 1975 MS 1978 Parten, William M. 1992 Instr Aerospace Studies. Paschke, Paul Edward 1969 Assoc Prof Finance & Int'l Business. SB Chicago 1962, MBA 1964; DBA Indiana 1970 Pascoe, Nanci J. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BS UC-Berkeley 1982, MS 1985 Pastorek, Christine 1980 Sr Instr Chemistry. BS San Francisco 1974; PhD Oregon State 1980 Pattee, Heidi Ann 1988 Instr Mechanical Engineering. BS Colorado School of Mines 1979; MS Colorado State 1987 Patterson, Joyce Elaine 1959 Assoc Prof, Communication Specialist, Ag Communications. BA South Dakota 1954; MA Oregon State 1973 Patterson, Lisa-Marie Jean 1992 Faculty Res Asst Columbia Basin Ag Res Center. BS Univ of Western Australia 1990 Patterson, Madge 1984 Catalog Coordinator. BA Northern Illinois University 1970. Patton, Nephi Monroe 1972 Director Laboratory Animal Resources, Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS Utah Sate 1958; DVM UC-Davis 1962; PhD Missouri 1972 Paulsen, Lenore Maxine 1969 Staff Chair (Interim) & Asst Prof Douglas Co Extn. BS South Dakota State 1956; MS Oregon 1977 Faculty 337 Paulson, Clayton Arvid 1971 Prof Oceanic & Petersen, Gary Paul 1982 Instr Industrial & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Augsburg 1960; PhD General Engineering. BS Oregon State 1976, MEd Poole, Susan Hufford 1986 Instr Pharmacy, Staff Pharmacist, Student Health Center. BS Oregon State 1980 1969 Peterson, Gary L. 1980 Res Assoc Biochemistry & Biophysics. BA UC-Irvine 1967; MS Hawaii 1969; PhD Oregon State 1975 Peterson, Jeffrey A. 1988 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS Oregon State 1982, MS 1989 Peterson, John 1964 Assoc Prof Civil Engineering. BS South Dakota State 1951; MS Illinois 1959; PhD Wisconsin 1964 Peterson, Richard B. 1985 Assoc Prof Mechanical Engineering. BS Nevada-Reno 1979; MS UCBerkeley 1982, PhD 1984 Pettibone, Gerald E. 1990 Head Football Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BA Oklahoma 1963 Pettit, Rebecca J. 1985 Assoc Prof Ext Prog 4-H. BS Nevada-Reno 1983, MS 1985 Philbrick, David Alan 1983 Assoc Prof Mechanical Engineering. AB Brown 1970; PhD UC-Berkeley Popkin, Annie Hunter 1992 Director (Acting) & Washington 1967 Paulson, Donna C. 1986 Instr Budgets & Planning. BA Augustana College 1953 Paustian, John William 1990 Faculty Res Asst Entomology. BS Hastings College 1985 Pawelek, Robert W. 1992 Instr Jefferson Co/Warm Springs Extn Agent. BS Texas A & M 1985 Payne, Roger F. 1984 Asst Crew Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Washington 1977 Pearson, Erwin G. 1981 Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS Oregon State 1954, MS 1979; DVM Comell 1958, Dipl ACVIM Pearson, George Denton 1971 Assoc Dean for Res & Admin/ Director Genetics Prog & Prof Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Stanford 1964, PhD 1969 Pearson, Margot Noall 1971 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Ag Chemistry. BA Oregon 1963; PhD Stanford 1971 Pease, James Robert 1973 Prof Geosciences; Extn Land Resource Mgmt Specialist. BA Massachusetts 1960, MS 1970, PhD 1972 Peckham, Charles Wesley 1965 Asst Prof & Director of Printing & Mailing Services. BS Cal State Poly-San Luis Obispo 1958 Pedersen, Elaine L. 1991 Assoc Prof Apparel, Interiors, Housing & Merchandising. BA Washington 1973; MA Michigan State 1975; PhD Minnesota 1983 Pelofske, Peter Joseph 1980 Faculty Res Asst North Willamette Research & Extension Center. BA Winona State 1969 Evangelical Theological Seminary 1973; MS Oregon State 1977 Peltz, Barbara J. 1992 Coordinator for Marketing NIRSA. BA Wichita State 1984 Penhallegon, Ross H. 1984 Assoc Prof Lane County Extn Agent. BA Washington State 1973, MA 1983 Penn, John Roger 1972 Dean of Students, Prof Education; Director CSSA Graduate Program. BA Colorado State 1967, MS 1968; PhD Oregon State 1972 Penner, Michael Henry 1986 Assoc Prof Food Science & Technology. BS Washington State 1976, MS 1979; PhD UC-Davis 1984 Pereira, Cheryl B. 1987 Pre-Health Advising Specialist College of Science. BS Portland State 1981 Pereira, Clifford Brian 1985 Res Assoc Statistics. BA Reed 1973; MS Portland State 1978; PhD Oregon State 1985 Perry, David Anthony 1977 Prof Forest Science. MS Florida 1966; MS Montana State 1971,PhD 1974 Perry, Gregory Merrill 1986 Assoc Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BS Utah State 1981, MS 1982; PhD Texas A & M 1986 Perry, Joanne Marion 1979, 1985 Asst Prof & Map Librarian, Kerr Library. BA Arizona 1971; MLS Kentucky 1972; MA Arizona 1976 Peters, Dawn M. 1988 Asst Prof Statistics. BA Florida 1979, MA 1984, PhD 1988 Peters, James R. Jr. 1992 Int'l Training Coordinator, Int'l Research & Development. BA Kenyon College 1984; MA Oregon State 1990 Peters, John A. 1985 Instr Crop & Soil Science. BS Notre Dame 1976 Petersen, Bent Edvard 1968 Prof Mathematics. BS British Columbia 1964; PhD MIT 1968 Asst Prof Difference, Power & Discrimination. BA Radcliff College, Harvard Univ 1967; MA Brandeis Univ 1973, PhD 1978 Porter, WarrenJ. 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Chemistry. BA Western Maryland 1985; PhD Wisconsin-Madison 1991 Potter, Joanne 1974 Faculty Res Asst Environmental Health Sciences Center Potter, Nathan 1989 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Antioch 1985 Potter, Sandra J. W. 1977 Asst Prof (Res Assoc/Sr Res) Zoology. BA Minnesota 1960; MAT College St. Thomas 1963; MS Arizona 1967, PhD 1970 Potts, Willard Charles 1959 Prof English. BA Washington 1952, MA 1956, PhD 1969 Powell, Rachel 1982 Instr English Language Institute. BA Trinity 1971; MA Oregon State 1981 1976 Powelson, Mary Lois 1972 Prof Botany & Plant Phillips, Mary Ellen 1973 Assoc Prof Acctg & Info Pathology. BS Bloomsburg State College 1963; MS Mgmt. BA Washington 1956; MBA Oregon State Michigan State 1965; PhD Oregon State 1972 1973 Prahl, Fredrick George 1984 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Picton, Jeffrey S. 1988 Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Atmospheric Sciences. BS Kentucky 1975; MS Medicine. BS Utah State 1979; BS Oregon State Washington 1978, PhD 1982 1988 Pratt, Clara Collette 1978 Prof Human Piel, Eric William 1992 Instr Int'l Education. BA Development & Family Sciences & Director Pomona College 1989 Piepmeier, Edward Harman 1966 Prof Chemistry. Program on Gerontology. BA Gonzaga 1970; MS Oregon 1972, PhD 1974 BS Northwestern 1960; PhD Illinois 1966 Pratt, David Sheldon 1981 Faculty Res Asst, Health Pierce, Donald Alan 1966 Prof Statistics. BS Physicist Radiation Center. BS Oregon State 1977 Oklahoma State 1961, MS 1962, PhD 1965 Pratt, Grahame Ellis 1987 Assoc Prof Entomology. Pilkerton, Stephan J. 1988 Faculty Res Asst Forest BA Cambridge 1963, PhD 1967 Engineering. BS Humbolt State 1985 Pribyl, Larry LeRoy 1982 Sr Instr, Distance Pilling, Susan C. 1990 Instr, Marine Education Specialist Extn/Sea Grant Marine Science Center. BS Learning Coord/Prod-Director, Communication Media Center. BA Nebraska 1978 Northern Michigan; MFS Yale 1984 Price, Edwin C. Jr. 1985 Director Int'l Research & Pilliod, Elizabeth A. 1989 Asst Prof Art. BA Development, Prof Ag & Resource Economics & Michigan 1976, MBA 1978, MA 1983, PhD 1989 Associate Dean, College of Ag Sciences. BS Florida Pillsbury, Ronald Dale 1967 Assoc Prof (Sr Res) 1966; MA Yale 1968; PhD Kentucky 1973 Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Chico State Price, Steven F., Sr. 1983 Faculty Res Asst 1961; MA UC-Davis 1964; PhD Oregon State 1972 Horticulture. BS Oregon State 1975; MS UC-Davis Pirelli, Gene Jack 1979 Assoc Prof & Staff Chair 1983 Polk Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1977, MS 1979 Primak, Paul 1991 Int'l Exchange Coordinator, Pisias, Nicklas G. 1981 Prof Oceanic & Int'l Education. BA Southern Oregon 1977 Atmospheric Sciences. BA San Francisco State 1970; Pritchett, Harold Duane 1957 Prof Civil MS Oregon State 1974; PhD Rhode Island 1978 Engineering. BS Oregon State 1957, MS 1961; DE Pittock, Henry L. 1974 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic Stanford 1965 & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1963, MS Proebsting, William Martin 1980 Prof 1968 Horticulture. BS Washington 1973; PhD Cornell Plant, Thomas Kent 1978 Assoc Prof Electrical & 1978 Computer Engineering. BS Kansas State 1968; MS Pscheidt, Jay William 1988 Asst Prof Extn Plant Iowa State 1969; PhD Illinois 1975 Pathologist. BS Wisconsin-Madison 1980, MS 1983, Platt, Barbara T. 1988 Instr Exercise & Sport PhD 1985 Science. BA Stanford 1977 Pugh, Tim Francis 111992 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic Pohjanpelto, Petri Julia 1989 Asst Prof & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Cal Poly 1987 Mathematics. MS Technology, Finland 1983; PhD Pyles, Marvin R. 1974-75, 1981 Assoc Prof Forest Minnesota 1989 Enginering. BS Oregon State 1973, MS 1975; PhD Polensek, Helen M. 1968 Instr English Language UC-Berkeley 1981 Institute. BA Houghton 1960; MA Michigan 1963 Poling, Dow Peter 1963 Assoc Prof Exercise & Sport Science.BS Oregon State 1956, EdM 1963; PhD Illinois 1972 Quinn, Michael Jay 1989 Assoc Prof Computer Poole, Arthur Parker 1975 Staff Chair (Interim) & Science Engineering. BS Gonzaga 1977; MS Prof Coos Co Extn. BA Northeastern 1965; BS Wisconsin-Madison 1979; PhD Washington State Oregon State 1969, MAgr 1971 0 1983 Faculty 338 Reisinger, Richard D. 1992 Asst Prof & Hood River Extn Agent. BS Michigan Tech 1976; MS Washington State 1979 Reistad, Gordon M. 1970 Dept Head & Prof Mechanical Engineering. BS Montana State 1966; MS Wisconsin 1967, PhD 1970 Reiter, Maryanne L. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Forest Engineering. BS Minesota-Central Office 1986; MS Oregon State 1990 Reitz, Alan E. 1990 Faculty Res Asst Mid-Columbia Ag Res & Extn Center. BS Colorado State 1989 Reno, Paul W. 1990 Assoc Prof Microbiology, Coastal Oregon Marine Exp Station. BS Fairleigh Dickinson 1966; MS Florida 1971; PhD Guelph 1976 Rettig, Raymond Bruce 1968 Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BA Montana 1962; MA Northwestern 1964; PhD Washington 1969 Reyes, Jose N. 1987 Assoc Prof Nuclear Engineering. BS Florida 1978; MS Maryland 1984, PhD 1986 Reynolds, Janice D. 1990 Asst Prof Baker Co Extn. BS, MAg Oregon State 1990 Rhinhart, Karl E. L. 1984 Faculty Res Asst Columbia Basin Ag Research Center. BS Oregon State 1984 0 Raab, Carolyn Ann 1975 Assoc Prof, Extn Food & Nutrition Specialist. BS UC-Berkeley 1970; MS UCDavis 1972; PhD VPI & State 1984 Rackham, Robert L. 1971 Staff Chair & Prof Benton Co Extn. BS Wyoming 1956, MS 1958 Rader, M. Kay 1987 Instr Pharmacy. BS Oregon State 1970 Radosevich, Steven R. 1984 Prof Forest Science. BS Washington State 1968; MS Oregon State 1971, PhD 1972 Rae, Madeline A. 1988 Instr Veterinary Medicine. BS Oregon State 1981, DVM 1985 Ragulsky, Frank A. 1982 Asst Prof, Director of Student Media. BS Southern Colorado 1968; MA Adams State College 1969; EdD Oklahoma State 1979 Rainbolt, Michael T. 1986 Academic Adviser College of Business. BS Washington State 1966; MS Washington State 1968 Rainbolt, Raymond E. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Minnesota 1991 Raissiguier, Catherine 1992 Asst Prof (Visiting) Women's Studies. MA SUNY-Buffalo 1985, PhD 1992 Rajagopal, Indira 1989 Res Assoc Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Delhi Univ (India) 1976, MS 1978; PhD Indian Institute of Science 1985 Rambo, Neil L. 1991 Inst Washington Cry Ext. BS Calif Poly-San Luis Obispo 1978 Ramsey, Fred Lawrence 1966 Prof Statistics. BA Oregon 1961; MS Iowa State 1963, PhD 1964 Randhawa, Sabah U. 1983 Acting Dept Head, Assoc Prof Industrial & Mfg Engineering. BS Eng & Tech (Pakistan) 1976; MS Oregon State 1980; PhD Arizona State 1983 Ratchford, Paulette L. 1990 Asst Director & Inst Student Housing & Residence Programs. BA California Lutheran 1985; MA Cal State-Northridge 1970 Rathja, Roy C. 1977 Asst Dean, Head Adviser College of Engineering, Assoc Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. BS UC-Davis 1969; MS Oregon State 1973, PhD 1980 Ream, Walt 1988 Assoc Prof Ag Chemistry. BA Vanderbilt 1975; PhD UC-Berkeley 1980 Reams, Jeff T. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Oregon State 1990 Reardon, Amy J. 1987 Instr Exchange Coordinator, Office of Int'l Education. BA Lake Erie College 1984 Rector, Michael L. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Forestry. BA Cal State-Chico 1979; MS Oregon State 1988 Reddy, Ashok P. 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Food Science & Technology. BS Osmania Univ (India) 1978; MS Michigan Tech U 1983; PhD Wayne State 1991 Reed, A. Scott 1990 Asst Dean College of Forestry, Extn Forestry Program LDR. BS Michigan State 1975, MS 1977; PhD Minnesota 1987 Reed, Donald James 1962 OSU Distinguished Professor, Biochemistry & Biophysics, Director Environmental Health Sciences Center. BS College of Idaho 1953; MS Oregon State 1955, PhD 1957 Reed, Gary L. 1985 Prof & Superintendent Hermiston Ag Research & Extension Center. BS Iowa State 1965, MS 1970, PhD 1974 Reed, Kimberly J. 1990 Asst Director/Mktg & Promotions Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oregon 1979 Reed, Marjorie A. 1989 Asst Prof Psychology. BS Montana State 1978; MS Oregon 1980, PhD 1984 Reed, Mark D. 1987 Instr, Media Specialist, Forestry Media Center. BS Oregon 1979; MA Cal State-Long Beach 1987 Reed, Ralph L. 1978 Res Assoc Ag Chemistry. BS Peru State 1971; PhD Oklahoma State 1976 Reiley, Ralph Hunt, Jr. 1976 Asst Prof, Asst Registrar. AB Muhlenberg College 1953; JD Rutgers 1957 Reinert, David Edward 1979 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1972 Rice, Laura Prindle 1979 Assoc Prof English. BA Ohio State 1968; MA Kent State 1971; PhD Washington 1976 Richards, Leslie N. 1989 Asst Prof Human Development & Family Sciences. BA Stanford 1975; MA Stanford 1976; PhD Cornell 1987 Richardson, Daryl Garnet 1973 Prof Horticulture. BS Minnesota 1969, MS 1971, PhD 1973 Richman, James G. 1978 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BSc Harvey Mudd 1971; PhD MIT-Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution 1977 Rickson, Fred Richard 1971 Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BA Cal State-Northridge 1961; MA Miami (Ohio) 1963; PhD UC-Berkeley 1966 Ridlington, James W. 1983 Res Assoc Nutrition & Food Mgmt. BS Washington State 1966; PhD Purdue 1971 Ridlington, Sandra S. 1973 Faculty Res Asst Sea Grant Communications. BA Washington State 1966; MA Purdue 1969, PhD 1979 Riebold, Thomas W. 1981 Director & Assoc Prof Veterinary Teaching Hospital. BS Illinois 1970, DVM 1972, Dipl ACVA Riedl, Helmut 1985 Assoc Prof Entomology, Mid- Columbia Ag Research & Extn Center. Dipl Ing Vienna (Austria) 1968; PhD Michigan State 1973 Riggs, William Wilson 1989 Asst Prof Lake Co Extn. BS New Mexico State 1987, MS 1989 Righetti, Timothy Lynn 1983 Prof Horticulture. BS Maryland 1976; PhD UC-Davis 1980 Riley, Jack Etter 1972 Assoc Prof, Head Baseball Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BA Linfield 1960; MA Oregon State 1971 Rinehold, John William 1977 Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BS Oregon State 1974, MS 1987 Ringle, John Clayton 1966 Assoc Dean Graduate School, Prof Nuclear Engineering. BS Case Inst of Tech 1957, MS 1959; PhD UC-Berkeley 1964 Ripple, William John 1981 Assoc Prof (Sr Res) Forest Resources, Director ERSAL. BS South Dakota State 1974; MS Idaho 1978; PhD Oregon State 1984 Ritchie, Nancy J. 1992 Faculty Res Asst. BS Michigan State 1992 Faculty Rivin, Carol Jane 1984 Assoc Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. AB UC-Santa Cruz 1973; PhD Washington 1978 Robbins, Barbara L. 1990 Faculty Res Asst Center for Gene Research. BS Oregon 1987, MS 1988 Robbins, Scott H. 1979 Sr Faculty Res Asst Horticulture. BS Oregon State 1975, MS 1981 Robbins, William Grover 1971 Prof History. BS Western Connecticut State 1962; MA Oregon 1965, PhD 1969 Robert, Charles H. 1990 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Biochemistry & Biophysics. BA Colorado College 1982; PhD Colorado 1988 Roberts, Mary Ann 1991 Faculty Res Asst Pharmacy. BS Wisconsin 1970; MS Oregon State 1977 Roberts, Paul Alfred 1966 Prof Zoology. BS Illinois 1953, MD 1957; PhD Chicago 1962 Roberts, Sheila Marie 1983 Instr, Counselor, Financial Aid Coordinator Educational Opportunities. BS Southern Oregon State 1975 Robinette, Christine 1986 Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BA Gwynedd-Mercy 1966 Robinson, Alan Hadley 1966 Dept Head & Prof Nuclear Engineering. BS Swarthmore 1956; MS Stanford 1961, PhD 1965 Robinson, Anja Marjatta 1970 Sr Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Turku (Finland) 1963, MS 1965 Robinson, Ann E. 1982 Instr & Asst Director, Student Media Communications. BA Oregon 1977; MATS Oregon State 1987 Robinson, David Miller 1976 Oregon Professor of English, Director American Studies Program. BA Texas, 1970; MTS Harvard Divinity School 1972; MA Wisconsin 1973, PhD 1976 Robson, Robert Oscar 1984 Assoc Prof Mathematics. BA Hampshire College 1975; MS Stanford 1977, PhD 1981 Rodriguez-Smith, Narcedalia 1988 Recruiter/ Adviser Educational Opportunities. BA Oregon State 1988 Roelofs, Adrienne Kehde 1983 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Michigan State 1969; MS Michigan 1979; PhD British Columbia 1983 Roesler, Collin S. 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Brown Univ 1985; MS Oregon State 1987; PhD Washington 1992 Rogers, William Reinhold 1980 Assoc Prof Lincoln Co Extn. BA Virginia 1967; MA Stanford 1968, MA 1969; BS Oregon State 1978, MS 1980 Rogerson, Patricia A. 1980 Academic Adviser, College of Liberal Arts. BS Oregon State 1956 Rogge, David E 1982 Assoc Prof Civil Engineering. BS Nebraska 1970, MS 1971; PhD Texas 1981 Rohovec, John S. 1977 Prof (Sr Res) Microbiology. BS New Mexico 1967; PhD Oregon State 1975 Rohrmann, George F. 1976 Prof Ag Chemistry. BA Washington 1965, PhD 1970 Root, Dennis Charles 1973 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1972 Root, Jon Richard 1969 Director & Prof Communication Media Center. BA Kansas State 1966; MS Oregon 1972, PhD 1978 Rower, Gregory L. 1989 Asst Prof Chemical Engineering. BS Michigan 1983; MS Michigan State 1985, PhD 1989 Rosato, Suzanne C. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BS Florida 1979, MAg 1990 Rose, Cathy L. 1991 Res Assoc Forest Science. BS Purdue 1977; MS Alaska 1982; PhD Oregon State 1990 Rose, Debra Jean 1985 Assoc Prof Exercise & Sport Science. BEd Melbourne 1976; MS Oregon 1982; PhD Penn State 1985 Rose, Jeffrey Alan 1988 Faculty Res Asst Eastern Oregon Ag Research Center-Squaw Butte. BA Yankton College 1983; MS Oregon State 1989 Rose, Robert W. 1986 Assoc Prof Forest Science. BA Connecticut 1968; MS Vermont 1975; PhD North Carolina State 1980 Roseberg, Richard J. 1990 Asst Prof Crop & Soil Science, Southern Oregon Exp Station. BS Oregon State 1980, MS 1985; PhD Ohio State 1988 Rosenberg, Valerie Palmer 1991 Int'l Student Advisor Int'l Education. BA Oregon 1980 Rosenberger, Nancy R. 1988 Asst Prof Anthropology. BA Wooster 1970; MA Michigan 1978, PhD 1984 Rosenfeld, Charles Louis 1974 Assoc Prof Geosciences. BA Pittsburgh 1968, MA 1971, PhD 1973 Rosenthal, Julie 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Humboldt State 1990 Ross, Andrew 1989 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Stockton State 1986 Ross, Darrell W 1990 Asst Prof Forest Science. BS Pennsylvania State Univ 1981; MS Oregon State 1985; PhD Georgia 1990 Ross, Richard Everett 1970 Prof Anthropology. BA Colorado 1959; MA Oregon 1963; PhD Washington State 1971 Ross, Susan A. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS U of Delaware 1984 Rubert, Steven C. 1991 Asst Prof History. BA Cal State-Northridge 1972; MA UC-Santa Barbara 1977; PhD UC-Los Angeles 1990 Rudd, Walter G. 1985 Dept Chair & Prof Computer Science Engineering. BA Rice 1966, PhD 1969 Ruddenklau, Helle Goddik 1992 Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BS Oregon State 1990 Rudinsky, Norma Leigh 1965 Sr Instr English. AB Stanford 1950, AM 1953 Rugh, William Daniel 1979 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1979 Rulofson, Franz C. 1988 Staff Chair & Asst Prof Deschutes Co Extn. BS Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo 1985; MS Nevada-Reno 1987 Runyon, John R. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS Oregon State 1983, MS 1988 Ruscoe, Jeffrey L. 1985 Instr Public Health. BS Oregon State 1983, MEd 1987 Rusk, Cherie R. 1989 Instr & Catalog Librarian, Kerr Library. BA Vermont 1984; MLS S Conn State 1989 Russell, Douglas E. 1979 Sr Faculty Res Asst Art. BS James Madison 1974 Russell, Judith S. 1989 Counselor/Coordinator Educational Opportunities. BS Oregon State 1988 Russell, Rebecca Lynn Quant 1982 Sr Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry BS Oregon State 1978, MS 1983 Russell, Sterling Arthur 1963 Sr Instr Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Utah State 1960, MS 1962 Rutherford, Gregory J. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Microbiology. BS Colorado State 1989; MS Oregon State 1992 Ryan, Lawrence J. 1988 Assoc Prof Psychology. BS Duke 1974; MA Colorado, 1978, PhD 1981 Rykbost, Kenneth A. 1987 Assoc Prof, Superintendent, Klamath Exp Station. BSc Cornell 1963, MS 1966; PhD Oregon State 1973 m Rossignol, Annette MacKay 1988 Dept Chair & Prof, Public Health. BA Wellesley 1974; MS Harvard 1977, ScD 1981 Rossignol, Philippe Albert 1988 Assoc Prof Entomology. BSc Ottawa 1971; MSc Toronto 1975, PhD 1978 Robbins, Barbara L. 1990 Faculty Res Asst Center for Gene Research. BS Oregon 1987, MS 1988 Rottmann, William H. 1990 Res Assoc Forest Science. BS SUNY-Stony Brook 1978; PhD UCBerkeley 1985 Roush, Mary Lynn 1988 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Forest Science. 2 eme Grenoble, France 1977; BH Colorado State 1979; MS UC-Davis 1984; PhD Oregon State 1988 Rowe, Kenneth Eugene 1964 Prof Statistics. BS Colorado State 1957; MS North Carolina State 1960; PhD Iowa State 1966 Rowe, Sonnia E. 1987 Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BS Oregon State 1987 Rowney, Thomas R. 1992 Head Women's Soccer Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BA Univ of Essex (England) 1978; MS U of Central Washington 1985 Royce, Lynn A. 1991 Asst Prof Entomology. BA Cal State-Chico 1969; MA Kansas 1974; PhD Oregon State 1989 Ruben, John Alex 1975 Prof Zoology. BS Humboldt State 1968; MA UC-Berkeley, PhD 1975 339 Sabin, Tom 1987 Sr Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS Rutgers Univ 1982; MA Oregon State 1987 Sated, Mohammad 1987 Faculty Res Asst Entomology. BS Agric (Pakistan) 1970, MS 1974 Sahr, Robert Clifford 1984 Assoc Prof Political Science. BA Washington State 1966; MDiv Yale 1970; PhD MIT 1979 Sakuma, Kazuhiko 1987 Res Assoc Chemistry. BS Gifu Pharmaceutical (Japan) 1978, MS 1980, PhD 1984 Saletore, Vikram 1990 Asst Prof Computer Science Engineering. BE Birla Institute of Tech & Sci 1975; MS UC-Berkeley 1977; PhD Illinois at Urbana- Champaign 1990 Samborski, Adam 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Chemistry. MS Warsaw Univ (Poland) 1983; PhD Polish Academy of Sciences 1991 Sampson, David 1990 Asst Prof Fisheries & Wildlife Coastal Oregon Marine Exp Station. BA Stanford 1975; MS Washington 1984; PhD London 1989 Samuel, Scott R. 1985 Sr Instr Russian. BA Oregon State 1974; MS Stanford 1976, PhD 1983 Samuels, Linda Marie 1975 Pharmacist Student Health Center. BS Oregon State 1972 Im Faculty Sanchez, Eve Chambers 1978 Instr English Schaup, Henry W. 1973 Assoc Prof Biochemistry & Language Institute. BA SUNY 1966; MA Middlebury Biophysics. BA Steubenville 1964; PhD Colorado 1969 State 1969 Scheuennann, Thomas A. 1990 Director & Inst Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Washington State 1979;Student Housing & Residence Programs. BS Ohio State 1976, MA 1979; JD Catholic Univ of America MA Ohio State 1983 1985 Sandeno, Joan M. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Crop & Schimerlik, Michael I. 1978 Prof Biochemistry & Soil Science. BS Oregon State 1961 Biophysics. BS Pennsylvania State; PhD Wisconsin Sanders, Raymond S. 1967 Chief Clinical Sandago, Michael Paul 1984 Head Trainer Psychologist Student Health Center. AB Chico State 1960; MA Michigan State 1965, PhD 1967 Sanderson, Donald R. 1968 Director & Assoc Prof Student Activities. BS Ohio Northern 1958; MEd Bowling Green 1965; MA Toledo 1966; EdD Oregon State 1971 Sanderson, Peter G. 1991 Res Assoc Bot & Plant Pathology, Mid-Columbia Ag Res Center. BS Rutgers Univ 1982; MS Wisconsin 1984, PhD 1991 Sandine, William E. 1958 Prof Microbiology. BS Iowa State 1950; MS North Carolina State 1955; PhD Oregon State 1958 Sanford, Stephanie Lynn 1985 Director Affirmative Action. BA Missouri-St. Louis 1975; MA Indiana 1979, PhD Indiana 1987 Sarasohn, Lisa Tunick 1978 Assoc Prof History. BA New York 1971; MA UCLA 1973, PhD 1979 Sastry, Srinivas S. 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Horticulture Res. BS GB Pant Univ (India) 1974; MS Tamil Nad Agri Univ (India) 1978; PhD Madurai Univ (India) 1983 Saunders, Julie S. 1986 Head Swimming Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oregon State 1986 Savage, Margaret 1989 Asst Prof Education. BS Oregon State 1975; MS Western Oregon 1976; PhD Monash Univ (Australia) 1983 Savage, Thomas F. 1982 Prof Animal Sciences. AB Suffolk University 1966; PhD University of New Hampshire 1972 Savonen, Carol A. 1988 Asst Prof Science Comm Spec Ag Comm. BA Lewis & Clark 1975; MS Vermont 1986 Sawyer, Teresa 1990 Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Oregon State 1990 Sayavedra-soto, Luis Alberto 1990 Res Assoc Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Universidad National Autonoma de Mexico 1975; MS Oregon State 1981, PhD 1985 Sayre, Henry M. 1984 Assoc Prof Art. BS Stanford 1971; PhD Washington 1976 Scanlan, Michael J. 1981 Assoc Prof Philosophy. BA Goddard 1973; MA Emory Univ 1981; PhD SUNY Buffalo 1982 Scanlan, Richard Anthony 1964 Dean of Research, Prof Food Science & Technology. BS Comell 1960, MS 1962; PhD Oregon State 1967 Schaake, Jay E. 1990 Asst Football Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Wyoming 1979, MS 1986 Schaefer, Michael 1989 Instr Acctg & Info Mgmt. BBA Univ of Portland 1971 Schafer, Daniel W. 1982 Assoc Prof Statistics. BA Pomona 1978; MS Chicago 1981, PhD 1982 Schaff, Barbara M. 1992 OSSHE French Study Resident Director - France. BS Oregon State 1981; MA Portland State 1992 Schary, Philip 1986 Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BS St Louis Univ 1951; MBA Univ of Calif 1955, PhD 1966 Schwallie, Edward 1985 Instr Mgmt & Marketing. BA Notre Dame 1977; MS Oregon 1980 Schwartz, Robert B. 1978 Prof English. BA Tulane 1972; PhD Virginia 1978 Schwartz, Susan Jeffries 1985 Instr & Coord Special Programs Int'l Education. BA Oregon State 1981 Scott, Edward A. 1988 Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS Cal-San Luis Obispo 1962; DVM Washington 1975 State 1967; MS Auburn 1971, Dipl ACVS Schlax, Michael G. 1988 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS UC-Berkeley 1978; MS British Columbia 1984; MS Stanford 1986 Schlichtman, William Joe 1990 Instr Naval Science Schmall, Vicki Louise 1975 Prof, Extn Gerontology Specialist. BS Montana State 1969; PhD Oregon State 1977 Schmidt, Kurt H. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Wisconsin 1991 Scott, Gregory Gould 1987 Instructional Schmisseur, Wilson Edward 1971 Assoc Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BS Illinois 1964; MS Purdue 1966, PhD 1973 Schmitt, Molly 1988 Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Illinois 1977 Schmitt, Roman A. 1966 Prof Chemistry, Radiation Center. MS Chicago 1950, PhD 1953 Schmotzer, Wayne B. 1982 Asst Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS Michigan State 1981, DVM 1981 Schneider, Gary Lee 1964 Prof Malheur Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1962, MAg 1971 Shneider, William G. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Forest Products. BS Maryland 1987; MS Virginia Tech 1991 Schoeberll, Bruce 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Computing Coordinator, College of Business. BS Oregon State 1974 Scott, Nan Herring 1973 Sr Instr Crop & Soil Science. BA Furman 1969 Scott, Shirley Ruth 1987 Head of Research & Access Services & Asst Prof, Kerr Library. BA Auburn 1970; MEd Georgia 1977; AMLS Michigan 1978 Sears, Charles Edward 1987 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1985 Sears, Irene Long 1970 Asst to the President. BA San Diego State College 1960 Seavert, Clark Frank 1989 Asst Prof Hood River Co Extn. BA College of Southern Idaho 1985; BS Oregon State 1987; MS Idaho 1988 Sebastian, Yvonne E. 1991 Memorial Union Activities Advisor. BA College of Santa Fe 1979; MS Wisconsin-Madison 1980 Sechrest, John Allen 1984 Sr Faculty Res Asst Computer Science Engineering. BS Illinois 1980 Seddigh, Majid 1983 Asst Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Tehran 1977; MS Oregon State 1980, PhD 1983 Seely, Justus Frandsen 1969 Dept Chair & Prof Statistics. BS Utah State 1963, MS 1965; PhD Iowa Wildlife. BS Iowa State 1991 Scholz, Todd V. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Civil Engineering. BS Oregon State 1987, MS 1989 State 1969 Schoonover, William R. 1991 Football Trainer (Interim) Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Southwest Missouri State 1991 Schori, Richard Miles 1978 ProfMathematics. BS Kenyon College 1960; MS Iowa 1962, PhD 1964 Schowalter, Timothy Duane 1981 Assoc Prof Entomology. BA Wichita State 1974; MS New Mexico State 1976; PhD Georgia 1979 Schramm, Richard Evan 1976 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. AS Clatsop Comm College 1976 Schreier, Richard 1991 Asst Prof Elect & Comp Engineering. BS Univ of Toronto 1983, MS 1985, PhD 1991 Selivonchick, Daniel Paul 1976 Prof Food Science & Technology. BS Eastern Illinois 1965; PhD Illinois Schreiner, Anthony E. 1992 Res Assoc Marine Seville, Mary Alice 1983 Assoc Prof Acctg & Info Mgmt. BA Southern Methodist 1964; MA Illinois 1968; BBA Alaska 1975; PhD Illinois 1983 Science Center. BS Massachusetts 1978; MS Hawaii 1983; PhD Scripps 1989 Schroeder, Warren Lee 1967 Chief Business Officer of Finance & Administration (Interim) & Prof Civil Engineering. BSCE Washington State 1962, MSCE 1963; PhD Colorado 1967 Schroth, Gary P. 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS UC-Davis 1985, PhD 1990 Schrumpf, Barry J. 1972 Assoc Prof, Seed Cert Asst Crop & Soil Science. BA Willamette 1966; MS Oregon State 1968, PhD 1975 Schultz, Robert James 1962 Prof Civil Engineering. BSCE Worcester Poly 1955, MSCE 1960 Schuyler, Michael W. 1981 Prof Chemistry. BS UCBerkeley 1966; PhD Indiana 1970 Seifried, Ann M. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Ripon College 1980 1973 Selker, John S. 1991 Asst Prof Bioresource Engineering. BA Reed College 1981; MS Cornell Univ 1989, PhD 1990 Sellers, Allen L. 1977 Director & Instr English Language Institute. BA Antioch 1967; MA Oregon 1976 Sessions, Julian 1983 Prof Forest Engineering. BS UCLA 1966; MS Cal State 1968; MS Washington 1971; PhD Oregon State 1978 Sessions, Michael Guy 1990 Asst Prof Naval Science. BS Washington 1977 Sexton, Camille M. 1985 Faculty Res Asst Forest Products. BS SUNY-Syracuse 1980 Sexton, Jay 1990 Sr Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS SUNY-Syracuse 1980 Seymour, Thomas A. 1992 Res Assoc Marine Branch Station. BS Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 1984; MS Wisconsin-Madison 1985; PhD Florida 1990 Shadbolt, Marsh B. 1982 Instr Educational Opportunities. BS Oregon State 1965, MS 1988 Shafabakhsh, Farhad 1985 Instr Crop & Soil Science. BS Cal State-Fresno 1981; MS Oregon State 1985 Faculty Shane, Barry 1971 Assoc Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BS Northeastern 1965, MBA 1967; PhD Massachusetts 1973 Sharrow, Steven Harold 1976 Prof Rangeland Simmons, Dale David 1959-1963, 1966 Dept Chair Resources. BS UC-Davis 1971; MS Texas Tech 1973, PhD 1975 Atmospheric Sciences. BS Rhode Island 1960; PhD Bristol (England) 1976 Simonsen, John 1990 Asst Prof Forest Products. BS Missouri 1969; PhD Colorado 1975 Simonson, William 1979 Assoc Prof Pharmacy. BS Rhode Island 1970; PharmD Michigan 1974 Simpkins, John 1111977 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Worcester Poly Shaughnessy J. Michael 1976 Prof Mathematics. BA LeMoyne 1968; MA Indiana 1970; PhD Michigan State 1976 Shaughnessy, Margaret M. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BA Saint Olaf College 1984; MS Minnesota 1989 Sheehy, Dennis P. 1992 Asst Prof Union Experiment Station. BA Oregon 1971; MS Oregon State 1975, PhD 1987 Shelby, Bo 1976 Prof Forest Resources. BA Colorado 1970; MS Wisconsin 1973; PhD Colorado 1976 Shenk, Myron Daniel 1969 Asst Prof Extn Entomology. BS Oregon State 1966, MS 1968 Shenk, Sheri Lynn 1987 Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Oregon State 1987 Shepard, W. Bruce 1972 Academic Affairs (Undergraduate Studies), Assoc Prof Political Science. AB UC-Riverside 1969, MA 1970, PhD 1972 Sherr, Barry 1990 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Kansas Wesleyan Univ 1965; MA Kansas 1970; PhD Georgia 1977 Sherr, Evelyn 1990 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Emory Univ 1969; PhD Duke Univ 1974 Shifrin, Kusiel S. 1992 Prof (Visiting) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. MS Leningrad Univ 1940, PhD 1943 Shindler, Bruce A. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Forest Resources. BA Cal State- Long Beach 1968; MS Oregon State 1990 Shinnick, Peter L. 1992 Recruiting Coordinator Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Colorado 1988 Shively, Stanley Edward 1968 Assoc Prof Sociology. BA Colorado 1955, MA 1957; PhD Pittsburgh 1966 Shock, Clinton C. 1984 Prof Crop & Soil Science, Superintendent Malheur Ag Experiment Station. BA UC-Berkeley 1966; MS UC-Davis 1972, PhD 1982 Shor, Molly H. 1992 Asst Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. BA Harvard 1984; MS Illinois-Urbana 1987, PhD 1992 Shriver, Ann L. 1986 Instr Int'l Research & Development. BS Georgetown 1979; MS Michigan State 1984; Shula, Robert 1990 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS Oregon State 1976 Shull, Wayne A. 1985 Asst Prof & Extn Specialist, Extn Community Development. BS Oregon State 1968, MEd 1989 Shumway, Sallyann M. 1963 Assoc Prof Baker Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1963 Siddens, Beth K. 1982 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Oregon State 1982 Siebler, Jane Ross 1979 Asst Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BA Oregon State 1975, MBA 1979 Siemens, Philip John 1988 Prof Physics. BSc MIT 1965; PhD Cornell 1970 Sifneos, Jean C. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Geosciences. BA Tulane Univ 1980; MS Oregon State 1986 Silberstein, Thomas Brian 1988 Faculty Res Asst Crop & Soil Science. BS Oregon State 1986 Simko, Ben Christopher 1978 Assoc Prof Malheur Co Extn. BS UC-Davis 1974, MS 1977 & Prof Psychology. BA U of Puget Sound 1954; MA Oregon 1958, PhD 1961 Simoneit, Bernd Rolf Tatsuo 1981 Prof Oceanic & 1972 Simpson, LoErna Palmer 1986 Asst Prof Apparel, Interiors, Housing, & Merchandising. BA Friends 1961; MS Kansas State 1963; PhD Texas Woman's 1980 Simpson, Norma L. 1992 Asst Prof Jefferson Co Extn. BA Idaho State 1957; MS Wisconsin 1969; EdD Oklahoma State 1974 Simpson, Ronald 1993 Instr Finance & Int'l Business. BS Brigham Young 1985; M-OT Northwestern 1986 Simas, David 1992 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Michigan 1982, MS 1987 Sisson, James 1977 Instr Acctg & Info Mgmt. BA Ohio Wesleyan 1963, MBA Wharton School/Pennsylvania 1968 Sivarampuram, Subramany 1992 FacultyRes Asst Oceangography. BS Sri Venkateswara College (India) 1989; MS Victoria Jubilee Tech. Inst. (India) 1991; Skaugset, Arne E. 1988 Instr Forest Engineering. BS Colorado State 1977; MS Oregon State 1980 Skehen, Joseph W. 1990 Director of Charitable Estate Planning Development Office. BS Illinois 1960, MS 1963 Skelton, John Edward 1985 Director & Prof Computing Services. BA Denver 1956, MA 1962, PhD 1971 Skilling, Douglas Edward 1981 Sr Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BS Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo 1970 Skjelstad, Lucy Sperlln 1977 Director Homer Museum, Asst Prof Anthropology. BA Cal StateChico 1971, MA 1979 Skubinna, Tamelyn K. 1983 Assoc Prof Benton Co Extn. BA Pacific Lutheran 1974, MA 1981 Slabaugh, Mary B. 1981 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Biochemistry & Biophysics. BA Michigan State 1972; PhD Wisconsin 1981 Sleight, Arthur W. 1989 Milton Harris Professor of Materials Science (Chair) & Prof Chemistry. BA Hamilton College 1960; PhD Connecticut 1963 Slocombe, Edmond N. 1986 Assoc Prof Lane County Extn. BS Kansas State 1963; MEd Colorado WE Smith, Alvin W. 1980 Prof Veterinary Medicine. BA Washington State 1955, DVM 1957; MS Texas A & M 1967; PhD UC-Berkeley 1975, Dipl ACLAM Smith, Bradford B. 1983 Assoc Prof Veterinary Medicine. BA Pomona College 1974; MS San Diego State 1976; BS Illinois-Urbana 1980, DVM 1982, PhD 1983 Smith, Charles Edward 1961 Prof Mechanical Engineering. BS ME Oregon State 1955; MS ME Rensselaer Poly 1958; PhD Stanford 1962 Smith, Courtland L. 1969 Prof Anthropology. BME Rennselaer Poly 1961; PhD Arizona 1968 Smith, David Clayton 1982 Sr Faculty Res Asst Horticulture. BS Oregon State 1982 Smith, Frederick John 1964 Extn Marine Economist; Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BS Cornell 1958; MS Oklahoma State 1962; PhD North Carolina State 1964 Smith, Gerald A. 1989 Asst Prof Exercise & Sport Science. BS Walla Walla; MS Illinois 1985; PhD Penn State 1989 Smith, Holly A. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Microbiology. BS Oregon State 1989 Smith, J.A. Sandy 1992 Faculty Res Asst Ext Crop & Soil Science. BS Arizona State 1978; MBA Oregon State 1990 Smith, Margaret 1977 Assoc Prof Public Health. BA Marylhurst 1963; MS Portland State 1969; EdD Oregon State 1981 Smith, Orrin E. 1980 Prof Horticulture, Associate Dean College of Ag Sciences, Director Extn Service. BS Oregon State 1957; PhD UC-Davis 1962 Smith, Robert Lloyd 1962 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Reed 1957; MA Oregon 1959; PhD Oregon State 1964 Smith, Stephen T. 1989 Commander & Prof Military Science. BS Ohio State 1969; MA Ohio 1983 Smith, Susan M. 1981 Sr Faculty Res Asst Forest Products. BS Massachusetts 1978; MS Oregon State 1981 Smith, Yvonne Loretta 1990 Counselor/Instructor Educational Opportunities. BS Oregon State 1985 Smyth, William D. 1992 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Univ of Alberta (Canada) 1984; MS Univ of Toronto (Canada) 1986, PHD 1990 Snelling, John C. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BA Claremont 1964; MA Wisconsin 1967 Snow-Harter, Christine M. 1990 Asst Prof Exercise & Sport Science. BA Washington 1973; MS Arizona 1975; PhD Oregon 1985 Snyder, Stanley P. 1985 Director Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, Prof Veterinary Medicine. DVM Colorado State 1966, MS 1967; PhD UC-Davis 1971, Dipl ACVD State 1975 Soeldner, Alfred Henry 1968 Sr Instr Botany & Small, Lawrence Frederick 1961 Assoc Dean & Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. AB Missouri 1955; MS Iowa State 1959, PhD 1961 Smart, William H. 1984 Assoc Prof, Int'l Student Adviser Int'l Education. BA North Carolina 1965; MA Illinois 1967, PhD 1974 Smiley, Richard W. 1985 Prof & Superintendent Columbia Basin Ag Research Center. BS Cal PolySan Luis Obispo 1965; MS Washington State 1969, PhD, 1972 Smiley, William 1987 Asst Prof Extn. BA Washington State 1964; MA Kansas 1972; MS Wyoming 1984 Plant Pathology. AAS SUNY-Farmingdale 1964; BS Oregon State 1967 Soleau, Carol Jean 1977 Assoc Prof Exercise & Sport Science. BA Stanford 1972, MA 1974 Sollins, Phillip 1977 Assoc Prof Forest Science (Sr Res). BA Swarthmore 1966; MA North Carolina 1970; PhD Tennessee 1972 Sollitt, Charles Kevin 1972 Assoc Prof Civil Engineering. BSCE Washington 1966, MSCE 1968; PhD MIT 1972 Solmon, Donald Clyde 1977 Prof Mathematics. BS Southeastern Massachusetts 1967; MS Oregon State 1973, PhD 1974 342 Faculty Somero, George Nicholls 1991 Wayne & Gladys Valley Professor of Marine Biology, Chair Marine Stang, Jack Rudolf 1976 Assoc Prof Horticulture. BS Clemson 1968, MS 1970; PhD Oregon State Stopherd, Murray J. 1987 Instr Food Services. BA Central Washington 1970; BA Washington State Biology, Prof Zoology. BA Carleton College 1962; PhD Stanford 1967 1976 1976 Stanger, Charles Earl, Jr. 1973 Prof Agronomy, Malheur Experiment Station. BS Utah State 1961; MS Oregon State 1971, PhD 1972 Stanik, Valerie 1984 Faculty Res Asst Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS UC-Davis 1976; MS Oregon State Stormshak, Fredrick 1968 Prof Animal Sciences. BS Washington State 1959, MS 1960; PhD Wisconsin Sonenberg, Maya 1990 Asst Prof English. BA Wesleyan Univ 1982; MA Brown Univ 1984 Sonn, Anita E. 1981 Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BS Oregon State 1980 Sorhus, Colin N. 1991 Proj Support Coord Int'l Research & Development. BA Brigham Young 1974; PhD Oregon State 1980 Sorte, Bruce M. 1990 Asst Director Ag Exp Station. BS Oregon State 1973 Sorte, Joanne Marion 1990 Director of Child Development Center, Instr Human Dev & Family Studies. BA Oregon State 1974, MS1990 Sosnovske, Daniel A. 1990 Faculty Res Asst Civil Engineering. BS Oregon State 1990 Southers, Chris Lee 1986 Asst Prof Education & Human Development & Family Sciences. BS Central Missouri State 1967; MEd Missouri 1970; PhD Missouri-Columbia 1981 Spak, Stephanie 1991 Instr English Language Institute. BA Portland State 1982, ME 1987 Sparrow, Margaret Anne 1981 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS UC-Davis 1978 Spee, Rene 1988 Asst Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. Vodiplom Stuttgart (West Germany) 1981; MS Oregon State 1984, PhD 1988 Spencer, Mara L. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Marine Science Center. BS Oregon State 1990 Spencer, Todd North 1990 Asst Football Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BA Pacific Luteran 1979; MA Linfield 1981 Spencer, William G. 1986 Acting Instr Public Health Spiegelberg, Scott F. 1990 Assoc Director for Public Relations Intercollegiate Athletics/Beaver Club Director. BS Oregon Statte 1976 Spikes, Kristin E. 1974 Instr & Asst to Director Int'l Education. BA Oregon State 1973 Splean, Scott 1990 Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. AS Coleman College 1972; BA Hawaii 1988; MS Oregon State 1990 Spotts, Robert Allen 1978 Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. Mid-Columbia Ext Center. BS Colorado State 1967, MS 1969; PhD Penn State 1974 Sproul, Christine 1985 Asst Prof Int'l Education. BA Brigham Young 1968, MA 1972; MS Utah 1982, PhD 1982 Spruill, M. Lynn 1984 Executive Director for Institutional Advancement, Prof Mgmt & Marketing. BS North Carolina State 1964; MBA Emory 1966; PhD Michigan 1972 Spycher, Gody 1979 Sr Faculty Res Asst Forest Science. BS Eth Zurich 1970; MS Oregon State 1972, PhD 1978 Sredl, Henry John 1983 Prof Education. BS New York 1956, MA 1960; PhD Ohio State 1964 Srivastava, Anil 1993 Product Testing Engineer College of Business. BS Marine Engineering College (India) 1985; MS Oregon State 1992 Stafford, Susan G. 1979 Prof Forest Science. BS SUNY-Syracuse 1974, MS 1975, PhD 1979 Stander, Mary Alice 1982 Coordinator of Student Athlete Svcs. Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Oregon State 1968, EdM 1983 Standley, David R. 1972 Sr Faculty Res Asst Civil Engineering. BS Oregon State 1968, MS 1972 1980 1965 Stoynoff, Stephen J. 1990 Asst Prof Education. BS Willamette 1976; MA Portland State 1984; PhD Oregon 1990 Strain, Joy G. 1987 Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BS Tennessee- Martin 1980; MS Memphis Stankey, George H. 1989 Prof (Sr Res) Forest Resources. BS Oregon State 1965, MS 1966; PhD State 1986 Michigan State 1970 Stanley, John D. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Strandberg, Lee R. 1980 Assoc Prof Pharmacy. BS Atmospheric Sciences. BS Michigan State 1978, MSNorth Dakota State 1968, MS 1970; PhD Colorado 1982 1975 Starnes, Charles Edwin 1976 Assoc Prof Sociology. Strauss, Steven H. 1985 Assoc Prof Forest Science. BS Cornell 1978; MS Yale 1980; PhD UC-Berkeley AB Indiana 1961, MS 1964, PhD 1973 Stauth, David D. 1984 Inst & News Writer, News & Communication Services. BS Northern Illinois 1974 Steffanson, Patricia Ann 1988 Instr Umatilla Co Extn. BS Idaho 1981 Stehr, Christian Peter 1974 Assoc Prof German & Linguistics. Dip Philos Wurzburg (West Germany) 1967; MA Oregon 1971, PhD 1975 Stein, David A. 1990 Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Oregon State 1981 Steinbrecher, Rosa E. 1988 Instr English Language Institute. BA Western Kentucky 1983, MA 1988 Stennett, Douglass J. 1989 Prof Pharmacy. PharmD, UC-San Francisco 1970 Stephen, William Procuronoff 1953 Prof Entomology. BSA Manitoba 1948; PhD Kansas 1952 1985 Strik, Bernadine C. 1987 Assoc Prof Horticulture. BS Victoria (Canada) 1983; PhD Guelph (Canada) 1987 Strohmeyer, Elizabeth Ann 1979 Coordinator of Recreational Sports. BS Illinois 1975, MS 1976 Strub, Paul Ted 1984 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS UC-Davis 1969, MS 1979, PhD 1983 Stuart, Moira 1988 Instr Coordinator Memorial Union Recreation. BS SUNY- Cortland 1986, MS 1988 Arizona State 1977; MAIS Oregon State 1980, MAg Subrahmanyam, Sriram 1993 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Univ of Roorkee (India) 1988; MS Oregon State 1991 Sugar, David 1981 Asst Prof Southern Oregon Ag Experiment Station. BA Michigan 1971; BS Washington 1975; MS UC-Davis 1977; PhD Oregon 1988 State 1989 Steppan, Linda G. 1976 Sr Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BS Oregon State 1967 Stem, Sam 1981 Prof Education. BS Eastern Kentucky 1972; MS Temple 1976, EdD 1980 Sugawara, Alan Iwao 1970 Prof Human Development & Family Sciences. BA Hawaii 1961; MDiv Chicago Theological Seminary 1965; MA Michigan State 1967; PhD Oregon State 1971 Stephenson, Garry Owen 1986 Asst Prof Extn. BA Sullivan, David 1981 Assoc Prof Acctg & Info Mgmt. BBA Oregon 1974; MS Carnegie-Mellon 1980, PhD 1981 Stevens, Billie K. 1976 Assoc Prof Hood River Co John Thomas 1992 Instr Forestry. BA Sultzmann, Extn. BS Idaho 1973; MEd Oregon State 1982 Kent State 1973; MS Oregon State 1992 Stevens, Carol 1991 Ext Intern-Warm Springs Summers, Michael R. 1990 Asst Football Coach Stevens, Donald G. 1988 Faculty Res Asst Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Georgetown 1978 Microbiology. BS Wisconsin State College 1963; MS Sun, Jielun 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Oceanic & Oregon State 1977 Atmospheric Sciences. BS Peking Univ 1983; MPhil Stevens, Joe Bruce 1966 Prof Ag & Resource Yale 1986, PhD 1991 Economics. BS Colorado State 1958; MS Purdue Sun, Le 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Biochemistry & 1963; PhD Oregon State 1965 Biophysics. BS NW Inst of Light Industry (China) Steward, Judith A. 1988 Staff Chair & Instr Lake 1982; MS Academic of Light Industry (China) 1985; Co Extn Agent. BS Oregon State 1988 PhD Tsinghua Univ (China) 1989 Stewart, John R. 1971 Sr Instr Landscape Sunderland, Paul Lewis 1987 Staff Chair & Assoc Horticulture. BS Oregon State 1969 Prof Multnomah Co Extn. BS Washington State Stiehl, Ruth E. 1972 Prof Education. AB Northwest 1973; MS Idaho 1980 Nazarene 1966; MEd Eastern Washington State Suttie, Sandra Jean 1969 Assoc Prof Exercise & 1969; EdD Idaho 1972 Sport Science. BS Colorado 1960; MS Oregon 1962; Still, Robert Edward 1971 Sr Faculty Res Asst PhD USC 1970 Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State Suzuki, Warren Noboru 1974 Assoc Prof Stetz, Albert William 1976 Prof Physics. BS Penn State 1962; PhD UC-Berkeley 1968 1962, MS 1970 Stillinger, Ronald 1972 Sr Faculty Res Asst Statistics. BS Oregon State 1971 Stoltz, Michael A. 1979 Prof Umatilla Co Extn. BS Montana State 1962; MS Oregon State 1975 Stone, Jeffrey Kyle 1987 Res Assoc Botany & Plant Pathology. BA Antioch 1976; PhD Oregon 1986 Education. BS Illinois 1963, MEd 1964, EdD 1968 Swan, Patricia L. 1978 Assoc Prof Polk Co Extn. BA Michigan State 1958; BS Oregon State 1976; MA Michigan State 1985 Swaney, Sherri Lynn 1992 Faculty Res Asst Microbiology. BA Western State College of Colorad' 1992 Faculty Thomson, Patricia Alice 1966 Sr Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BS Oregon State 1964 Thorpe, James Norman 1987 Asst Prof Extension. BS Illinois 1985, MS 1987 I' I c Thresher, Wayne C. 1991 Res Assoc Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS North Carolina State 1982, MS 1984, PhD 1988 Tibbs, Larry W. 1989 Asst Prof Klamath Co Extn. BS Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo 1981, MS 1988 Tibbs, Teena M. 1991 Faculty Res Asst. Eastern Oregon Ag Research Center at Union. BS Eastern Oregon State College 1991 Tice, Ezra M. 1988 Asst Prof Bioresource Engineering. BS Penn State Univ 1973, MS 1983; PhD Auburn Univ 1988 Ticknor, Robert Lewis 1959 Prof Horticulture, North Willamette Research & Extension Center. BS Oregon State 1950; MS Michigan State 1951, PhD 1953 Tiedeman, Gary Howard 1970 Prof Sociology. BA Colorado 1961; MA Stanford, 1963; PhD North Carolina 1968 Tiger, George Wayne 1966 Asst Prof Jackson Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1966; MS Oregon 1977 Tilles, E. Doris 1968 Head of Inter-Library Loans & Swanson, Lloyd Vernon 1971 Prof Dairy Physiology. BS Minnesota 1960, MS 1967; PhD Michigan State 1970 Sward, Mary Ann 1986 Instr Extn Housing Specialist. BS Nebraska 1976; MS Tennessee 1978 Swenson, Leonard Wayne 1968 Prof Physics. BS MIT 1954, PhD 1960 Sylvia, Gilbert R. 1988 Asst Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BS Mass 1973; MS Colorado State 1981; PhD Rhode Island 1989 Tadepalli, Prasad 1989 Asst Prof Computer Science Engineering. BTech REC Warangag (India) 1979; MTech IIT Madras (India) 1981; PhD Rutgers 1990 Takayuji, Yakura 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Chemistry. BS Osaka Univ (Japan) 1984, PhD 1989 Takazawa, Nobuko 1992 Instr Japanese. BA Hawaii 1988; EdM Oregon State 1992 Tanaka, John Augustus 1985 Assoc Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BS Oregon State 1978, MS 1982; PhD Utah State 1985 Tang, Shuang 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Chemistry. BS Univ of Science & Technology of China 1982; PhD SUNY-Stony Brook 1988 Tappeiner, John Cummings, 111980 Prof Forest Resources. BS UC-Berkeley 1957, MS 1961,PhD 1966 Tarbox, James J. 1992 Asst Prof (Visiting) Speech Communication. BA Bates College (Maine) 1986; MA Pennsylvania State 1988, PhD 1992 Tate, Janet 1989 Asst Prof Physics. BSc Natal 1981; MS Stanford 1984, PhD 1988 Taylor, Barbara J. 1991 Asst Prof Zoology. BA Colorado 1974; PhD UC-San Diego 1988 Taylor, Edward Morgan 1966 Assoc Prof Geosciences. BS Oregon State 1957, MS 1960; PhD Washington State 1967 Taylor, George H. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA UC-Santa Barbara 1969; MS Utah 1975 Taylor, R. Bruce 1990 Asst Prof Industrial & Mfg Engineering. BS UCLA 1971; MSE Arkansas 1987, PhD 1990 Terrel, Ronald L. 1989 Prof Civil Engineering. BS Purdue 1960, MS 1961, PhD UC-Berkeley 1967 Terrio, Deone M. 1990 Instr Political Science. BA SUNY-Albany 1979; MA Cornell Univ 1984 Tesch, Steven D. 1981 Assoc Prof Forest Science. BS Montana 1973, MS 1975, PhD 1981 Test, Pete S. 1987 Asst Prof Grant Co Extn. BS Nevada-Reno 1969; MS Texas Tech 1972; PhD Wyoming 1984 Thiegles, Bart A. 1990 Assoc Dean for Research, College of Forestry. BS Southern Illinois 1963; MF Yale School of Forestry 1964; M Phil Yale Univ 1967, PhD 1968 Thies, Janice E. 1990 Res Assoc Crop & Soil Science. BS Washington 1976; MS Hawaii 1986, PhD 1990 Thies, Richard William 1968 Assoc Dean College of Science, Prof Chemistry. BS Michigan 1963; PhD Wisconsin 1967 Thomann, Enrique A. 1987 Asst Prof Mathematics. BS Nat Cordoba 1977; PhD UC-Berkeley 1985 Thomas, Claire Daines 1992 Instr Statistics. BS Oregon State 1974; MBA Oregon 1977 Thomas, David Reginald 1967 Prof Statistics. BS Oregon State 1960, MS 1962; PhD Iowa State 1965 Thomas, Thomas Darrah 1971 OSU Distinguished Professor Chemistry. BS Haverford 1954; PhD UCBerkeley 1957 Thompson, Georgine Emmily 1969 Psychiatric Social Worker, Student Health Service. BS Michigan State 1964; MSW, Illinois 1969, ACSW 1972, RCSW 1978 Thompson, James 1989 Extension Sheep Specialist Assoc Prof Animal Sciences. BS Wisconsin 1969; MS Missouri-Columbia 1977, PhD 1980 Thompson, Jon 1992 Faculty Res Asst Biochemistry & Biophysics. BA Oregon 1991; BS Oregon State Assoc Prof, Kerr Library. AB UC-Berkeley 1956, MIS 1957; MA Stanford 1976 Tillson, Gregory Davis 1970 Assoc Prof, Coordinator Extn Family Community Leadership Project. BS Oregon State 1970, MS 1977 Timm, Karen I. 1983 Assoc Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS UC-Davis 1966, DVM 1968, PhD 1985 Dipl Adam Tinsley, Ian James 1957 Dept Chair & Prof Ag Chemistry. BSc Sydney (Australia) 1950; MS Oregon State 1955, PhD 1958 Tipton, Grant M. 1992 Instr Ag Education. BS Oregon State 1982, MEd 1984; PhD Iowa State 1992 Todd, Rodney Moms 1974 Assoc Prof Klamath Co Extn. BS UC-Davis 1968; MS Colorado State 1970 Tokayuk, Gregory 1992 Instr French. BA Kiev State School of Foreign Languages (USSR) 1970; MA Kiev Pedagogical Inst of Foreign Languages (USSR) 1970 & 1971; PhD Equivalent Kiev State Univ Schevchenko 1972 Toile, Michael 1993 Instr Mechanical Engineering. BS Harvey Mudd College 1982; MS Stanford 1990 Topielec, Richard R. 1991 Asst Prof Union Cty Extension. BS Southern Illinois 1971; MA Governor's State Univ 1975; MAg Oregon State 1984 Torres, J. Antonio 1985 Assoc Prof Food Science & Technology. BS Catholic Technology 1973; ScM MIT 1978, PhD 1984 Torset, Clay William 1984 Asst Director & Instr Admissions. BS Oregon State 1981, MBA 1990 Toumadje, Arazdordi 1984 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Shiraz (Iran); MS UC-Davis 1980; PhD Oregon State 1984 Tower, Terrill Kay 1989 Assoc Director & Instr Student Housing & Residence Programs. BA Oregon State 1969, MEd 1980 Towey, Richard Edward 1962 Prof Economics. BS San Francisco 1954; MA UC-Berkeley 1957; PhD 1967 1991 Trehu, Anne Marline 1987 Assoc Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA Princeton 1975; PhD MIT Thompson, Virginia 1987 Faculty Res Asst 1982 Extension. BS Oregon State 1980; MS Southern Oregon 1983 Faculty Tremblay, Carol Hofton 1990 Asst Prof Kerr 1966 Trow, Jo Anne J. 1965 Vice Provost for Student Affairs, Prof Education. BA Denison 1953; MA Indiana 1956; PhD Michigan State 1965 Truitt, Robert Eugene 1989 Faculty Res Asst Forest Resources. BS Oregon State 1984 Tubb, Richard Arnold 1975 Dept Head & Prof Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Oklahoma State 1958, MS 1960, PhD 1963 Tuck, Brian Victor 1984 Assoc Prof Sherman Co Extn. BS Cal State-Fresno 1974, MA Oregon State 1984 Tucker, Gabriel F. 1990 Asst Prof Forest Science. BS Oregon State 1976; MS Washington 1983; PhD Cornell 1990 Tufts, Terri 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Cornell 1992 Turner, Harley A. 1974 Assoc Prof Animal Sciences, Eastern Oregon Ag Res Center at Squaw Butte & Union. BS Oregon State 1964, MS 1965; PhD Missouri 1974 Turpin, Jim 1985 Asst Prof, Head Gymnastics Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS San Jose State 1971 vI Washington State 1982, PhD 1984 Tremblay, Victor 1990 Dept Chair & Assoc Prof Economics. BA UCLA; MA Cal State-Northridge; PhD Washington State 1983 Trempy, Janine E. 1989 Asst Prof Microbiology. BS Kansas State 1980; PhD Texas 1985 Tricker, Raymond 1989 Assoc Prof Public Health. DiPED Cambridge 1966; DiPPE Carnegie, Leeds 1968; MA Oregon 1978, PhD 1985 Tripathi, Vijai Kumar 1974 Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. BSc Agra 1958; MSc Tech Allahabad 1961; MSEE Michigan 1964, PhD 1968 Trow, Clifford Wayne 1965 Prof History. AB Kansas Wesleyan 1951; MA Colorado 1958, PhD 11 Library & Economics. BA UC-Irvine 1976; MA van der Mars, Hans 1992 Asst Prof Exercise & Sports Science. Teaching Diploma Christelijke Acad. voor Lichamelijke Opvoeding (Netherlands) 1978; MS Ithaca College 1979; PhD Ohio State 1984 Van Buskirk, Philip D. 1984 Asst Prof Jackson Co Extn. BS Davis & Elkins College 1976; MS West Virginia 1981 Van de Water, John 1976 Dean & Prof Int'l Education. BA St. Lawrence 1961; MA Syracuse 1967, PhD 1970 Van de Water, Nancy Carolyn 1985 Asst to the Director & Instr, Financial Aid. BS Syracuse 1968, MLS 1976 Van Holde, Kensal Edward 1967 Stewart Professor of Gene Research, OSU Distinguished Professor, Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Wisconsin 1949, PhD 1952 Van Saun, Robert J. 1992 Asst Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS Michigan State 1978, DVM 1982, MS 1988 Van Vechten, James A. 1985 Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. BA UC-Berkeley 1965; MA Chicago 1976, PhD 1969 Van Zee, Karen L. 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Horticulture. BA Princeton 1987; PhD Ludwig Maximilian Univ (Germany) 1992 Vander Heyden, Madeleine 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Wisconsin 1987 Vanderpool, Nancy M. 1979 Asst Dean of Students, Asst Prof Education. BA Oregon 1958; MA Syracuse 1960; PhD Oregon State 1987 Vanderveen, Randall L. 1988 Assoc Prof, Asst Dean for Pharmacy Practice. BS Purdue 1974, MS 1976; PhD Michigan State 1987 Vandetta, Curt 1989 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1989 Vars, R. Charles, Jr. 1966 Prof Economics. BS Denver 1958, MBA 1960; MA UC-Berkeley 1965, PhD 1969 Vavra, Martin 1971 Prof Animal Sciences & Rangeland Resources, Superintendent Eastern Oregon Ag Research Center at Squaw Butte & Union. BS Arizona 1966, MS 1969; PhD Wyoming 1972 Vejil, Emilio 1974 Assoc Director & Asst Prof Financial Aid. BS Oregon State 1973, MEd 1979 Veltri, Anthony Thomas 1985 Assoc Prof Public Health. BS Salem College 1973; MS West Virginia 1975, EdD 1985 Vendeland, Susan C. 1987 Res Assoc Ag Chemistry. BS Washington 1973; PhD Comell 1983 Venkatraman, Gopal 1989 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Inst of Tech & Sci (India) 1987; MS Northeastern 1989 Verhoeven, Mary Boulger 1973 Instr Crop & Soil Science. BA Skidmore 1968; BS Oregon State 1972, MS 1980 Ver Linden, Carolyn Ann 1990 Faculty Res Asst Entomology. BS Cal State-Hayward 1976; MS UCRiverside 1990 Verts, B. J. 1965 Prof Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Missouri 1954; MS Southern Illinois 1956, PhD 1965 Verts, Lita Jeanne 1974 Director Special Services Project & Asst Prof Educational Opportunities. BA Oregon State 1973; MA Oregon 1974 Verzasconi, Ray A. 1967 Dept Chair Foreign Languages & Literatures Prof of Spanish. BA UCBerkeley 1960; MA Washington 1962, PhD 1965 Vial, James Leslie 1991 Prof (Sr Res) Fisheries & Wildlife. BA Cal State-Long Beach 1952, MA 1954; PhD Southern California 1965 Vickers, Dean 1983 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS SUNY 1975; MS Oregon State 1979 0 Vilbig, Glory 1983 Physician Student Health Center. BS Southern Methodist 1956; MD TexasGalveston 1960 Villarroel, Luz Maciel 1992 Instr Educational Opportunities. BA Western Oregon 1973; MEd Oregon State 1974, PhD 1986 Vinson, Ted Stephen 1976 Prof Civil Engineering. BS UC-Berkeley 1966, MS 1967, PhD 1970 'IN I N Uddin, Wakar 1988 Faculty Res Asst Ag Exp Station. BS Nevada-Reno 1985, MS 1987 Ulaeto, David O. 1992 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Microbiology. BS Univ of Birmingham (United Kingdom) 1984, PhD 1988 Ullman, David G. 1984 Prof Mechanical Engineering. BS Cincinnati 1968, MS 1970; PhD Ohio State 1978 Unger, Donald Ben 1972 Asst Prof & Physical Sciences Librarian, Kerr Library. BA William Jewell 1956; MLS Oklahoma 1972; MA Kansas 1975 Ungerer, Carl A. 1977 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Cal Poly 1973; MS Oregon State 1981 Unsworth, Michael H. Director for Center of Analysis of Environmental Change, Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Univ of Edinburgh (England) 1965, PhD 1968 Urban, Stella E. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Hermiston Res Ext Center. BS Oregon State 1989 Urquhart, N. Scott 1991 Prof (Sr Res) Statistics. BS Colorado State 1961, MS 1962, PhD 1965 Uzgalis, William L. 1981 Assoc Prof Philosophy. BA UC-Irvine 1972; MA Cal State-Long Beach 1976; PhD Stanford 1981 11 Faculty Vischer, Axel P. 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Physics. Virdiplom Univ of Stuttgart (Germany) 1987; MS Oregon State 1991, PhD 1992 Vloedman, Herb R. Jr. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Political Science. BS Oregon State 1988 Vogue, Margaret A. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Ag Chemistry. BS Western Washington 1984; MS Oregon State 1990 Volk, Elzibeth 1987 Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. AS Maine 1983; BS Oregon State Walker, Robert J. 1986 Faculty Res Asst Radiation Center. BS Cal State Sacramento 1978; MS Colorado School of Mines 1982; PhD Oregon State 1989 Walker, Stel Nathan 1986 Asst Prof Mechanical Engineering. BS Oregon State 1970, PhD 1976 Wallace, Alan Keith 1984 Assoc Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. BEng Sheffield (England) 1963, PhD 1966 1986 Louisiana 1985, PhD 1991 Walstad, John Daniel 1980 Dept Head & Prof Forest Resources. BS William & Mary 1966; MF Duke 1968; PhD Cornell 1971 Walstad, Leonard J. 1988 Asst Prof (Sr Res) Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Vermont 1981; MS Harvard 1987, PhD 1987 Volk, Veril Van 1966 Prof Crop & Soil Science. BSc Ohio State 1960, MS 1961; PhD Wisconsin 1965 Voller, Bernadette E. 1982 Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BS Oregon State 1982, MS 1991 Walls, Susan C. 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Zoology. BS Mississippi State 1983; MS SW Vong, Richard J. 1989 Asst Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS North Carolina State Wander, Rosemary 1986 Assoc Prof Nutrition & 1971; MSE Washington 1982, PhD 1985 Food Mgmt. BS Centenary (Louisiana) 1964; MS Ohio State 1968; PhD Georgia 1984 Vuchinich, Donna J. 1991 Development Officer, University Projects. BA New Mexico 1984 Wang, Jun-Lan 1970 Res Assoc Agricultral Chemistry. BS Normal (Taiwan) 1960; BA North Vuchinich, Samuel 1988 Assoc Prof Human Carolina-Greensboro 1970; PhD Oregon State 1977 Development & Family Sciences. BA Indiana 1970; MA Michigan 1972; PhD Michigan 1975 Wang, Ruiping 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Vydra, Marianne J. 1992 Asst Academic Counselor Chemistry. BS Univ of Sci & Technology of China 1984; MS Oregon State 1988, PhD 1991 Intercollegiate Athletics. BS SW Missouri State 1989; MA Maine 1992 Wanke, Lee A. 1990 Director Drug Consultation Service, Prof Pharmacy. BPharm Washington State 1971; MS Ohio State 1973 Ward, Kathy 1990 Faculty Res Asst Columbia Basic Ag Res Center. BS Oregon State 1973 Wachenheim, Daniel E. 1990 Res Assoc (Post Waring, Richard Harvey 1963 Prof Forest Science. Doct) Veterinary Medicine. BS Illinois 1980, MS BS Minnesota 1957, MS 1959; PhD UC-Berkeley 1983; PhD Purdue 1990 1963 Waddington, John S. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Warkentin, Benno P. 1977 Prof Crop & Soil Fisheries & Wildlife. BA Western State CollegeScience. BSA British Columbia 1951; MS Colorado 1988 Washington State 1953; PhD Cornell 1956 Wagener, Joseph Mark 1969 Clinical Psychologist, Warner, Rebecca Lynn 1990 Assoc Prof Sociology. Student Health Center. AB Ohio 1962; MA Kent BA Portland State 1980; MA Washington State State 1964; PhD Purdue 1969 1982, PhD 1985 Wager, John Fisher 1111984 Assoc Prof Electrical & Warnes, William H. 1986 Assoc Prof Mechanical Computer Engineering. BS Oregon State 1977; MS Engineering. BA UC-San Diego 1979; MS Colorado State 1978, PhD 1981 Wisconsin-Madison 1981, 1983, PhD 1986 Wagner, Frank F. 1985 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Warren, William W., Jr. 1991 Prof Physics. BS Wildlife. BS Missouri 1971 Stanford 1960; PhD Washington 1965 Wagner, Gerald F. 1991 Asst Volleyball Coach Washburn, James L. 1968 Sr Faculty Res Asst Civil Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Montana 1986, MS Engineering. BS Oregon State 1968 1990 Wagner, Sheldon L. 1966 Prof Ag Chemistry. BS Wisconsin-Madison 1954; MD 1957 Waldorf, Walt 1992 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Humboldt State 1971 Waldvogel, James Brian 1979 Asst Prof Curry Co Marine Extn. BS Humboldt State 1968, MS 1977 Walenta, Darrin L. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Columbia Basin Ag Res Center. BS Oklahoma State 1992 Walker, Alexis J. 1986 Prof Human Development St Family Sciences. BA Mercyhurst 1974; MS Purdue 1975; PhD Penn State 1979 Walker, Gregg B. 1987 Director Peace Studies Certif. Program, Assoc Prof Speech Communcation. BA/BS Minnesota 1974; MA Kansas 1982, PhD 1983 Walker, Karen C. 1986 Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BS Ore Inst of Tech 1975 Walker, Lori L. 1988 Faculty Res Asst Veterinary Medicine. BA/BS Oregon State 1983; BS Washington State 1985; DVM Oregon State 1988 Wasserman, Allen Lowell 1965 Prof Physics. BS Carnegie Institute of Technology 1956; PhD Iowa State 1963 Waterhous, D. Vincent 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Kentucky 1976, 1981; MS Cast Western Reserve Univ of AlabamaBirmingham 1989 Watkins, Deane Ann 1984 Instr & Social Science Reference Librarian, Kerr Library. BA Oregon 1977, MLS 1978 Watral, Virginia 1990 Faculty Res Asst Microbiology. BS Oregon State 1989 Watrous, Barbara J. 1981 Assoc Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS UC-Davis 1972, DVM 1974, Dipl ACVR Watson, Barney T. Jr. 1976 Sr Instr Food Science & Technology. BA UC-Berkeley 1971; MS UC-Davis 1975 Watson, Jairus H. 1992 University Architect. BA Oregon 1970 Watson, Philip 1984 Assoc Prof Chemistry. BA Oxford 1974; PhD British Columbia 1979 345 Watson, Richard P. 1992 Asst Prof Naval Science. BS New Mexico 1986 Watts, Sandra Leal 1981 Asst Prof Curry Co Extn. BS Oregon 1981; MS Oregon 1989 Wax, Darold Duane 1962 Prof History. BA Washington State 1956; MA Washington 1959, PhD 1962 Way, James Douglas 1989 Asst Prof Chemical Engineering. BS Colorado 1978, MS 1980, PhD 1986 Waymire, Edward C. 1982 Prof Mathematics. BS Southern Illinois-Edwardsville 1971; MS Arizona 1972, PhD 1976 Weaver, Jonathan D. 1990 Asst Fund Raiser Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Portland State 1986 Weaver, Roger Keys 1962 Prof English. BA Oregon 1957; MA Washington 1962; MFA Oregon 1967 Webb, Warren L. 1992 Assoc Prof (Sr Res) Forest Science. BS Oregon State 1959, 1964, MS 1966, PhD 1971 Weber, Bruce Alan 1974 Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BA Seattle Univ 1965; MS Wisconsin 1972, PhD 1973 Weber, Dale William 1976 Prof Animal Sciences. BS Iowa State 1952, MS 1970, PhD 1974 Weber, Lavern John 1969 Director Hatfield Marine Science Center, Supervisor Coastal Oregon Experiment Station, Prof Pharmacology & Fisheries & Wildlife. BA Pacific Lutheran 1958; MS Washington 1962, PhD 1964 Weber, Mysti 1992 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Oregon State 1991 Webster, Janet Gray 1989 Instr, Head of Hatfield Marine Science Center Library. BA Chicago 1975; MLS Columbia 1986 Weeks, Herschel Paul 1988 Asst Prof Ag Education & General Agriculture. BS Cal State-Chico 1976; BS Oregon State 1983, MS 1983; PhD Iowa State 1989 Weideman, Jacob Andreas Cornelius 1990 Asst Prof Mathematics. BS Univ of Orange Free State 1978, MS 1980, PhD 1986 Weinman, Richard Jay 1967 Prof Speech Communication. AB Indiana 1955; MFA Columbia 1956; PhD Indiana 1965 Weiser, Conrad John 1973 Dean College Ag Sciences, Prof Horticulture. BS North Dakota State 1957; PhD Oregon State 1960 Weisshaar, Andreas 1991 Asst Prof Electrical & Computer Engineering. Vordiplom Universitat Stuttgart (Germany) 1981; MS Oregon State 1986; Diplom-Ingenieur Universitat Stuttgart (Germany) 1987; PhD Oregon State 1991 Welle, J. Janice 1992 Chief Admin Officer Development Office. BA Portland State 1969, MA 1968; PhD Oregon State 1977 Weller, Brenna Best 1980 Instr English. BA Oregon State 1978; MA Oregon 1979 Weller, Doreen L. 1983 Res Assoc Chemistry. BS Marymount 1977; MS Illinois 1981 Weller, Dwight Donan 1978 Assoc Prof Chemistry. BS Lafayette 1972; PhD UC-Berkeley 1976 Wells, Gail 1990 Natural Resources Comm. BA Western Oregon 1985 Wells, Joseph T. 1992 Head Wrestling Coach Intercollegiate Athletics. BS Iowa 1970 Wells, Judith A. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Massachusetts 1989 Wells, William K. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Forest Resources. BS Utah State 1991 346 Faculty Welty, James Richard 1958 Prof Mechanical Engineering. BSME Oregon State 1954, MSME 1959, PhD 1962 Wendler, Brian 1988 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Illinois 1980; MS Florida Inst of Technology 1984 Wendt, Nancy J. 1990 Instr Speech Communication. BS Cal State Sacramento 1980, MA 1982 Werner, Ann C. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Forest Resources. BS Oregon 1973; MS Oregon State 1978 Wess, Robert Victor 1978 Assoc Prof English. BA Chicago 1963, MA 1966, PhD 1970 Wessling, Rose 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Kansas 1987 West, H. Milton 1980 Instr, Camp Director Educational Opportunities. MA Oregon State 1980 West, Kenneth John 1982 Faculty Res Asst Entomology. BS Syracuse 1978; MS Oregon State 1990 West, Thomas Moore 1976 Assoc Dean Engineering (Interim) Assoc Prof Industrial & Mfg Engineering. BS Tennessee-Knoxville 1963, MS 1965; PhD Oregon State 1976 Westall, John C. 1980 Prof Chemistry. BS North Carolina 1971; PhD MIT 1977 Westlund, Robert E. 1992 Sr Development Officer, University Projects. BA UC-Santa Barbara 1956 Whanger, Philip Daniel 1966 Prof Ag Chemistry. BS Berry College 1959; MS West Virginia 1961; PhD North Carolina State 1965 Wheeler, George MacGregor 1980 Assoc Prof, Extn Energy Specialist. BS MIT 1967; MS UC-Berkeley 1970, PhD 1972 Wheeler, Linda Joyce 1988 Faculty Res Asst Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Oregon State 1974 Wheeler, Patricia A. 1982 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BA UC-Irvine 1971, MS 1974, PhD 1976 Whipple, Margaret J. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Microbiology. BA UC-San Diego 1973 White, Anthony John 1974 Assoc Director Computing Services. BA Pomona College 1963; MS US Int'l Univ 1970 White, George Randolph 1989 Instr Jackson Co Extn. BS Cal State-Fresno 1981 White, James David 1971 OSU Distinguished Professor, Chemistry. BA Cambridge 1959; MSc British Columbia 1961; PhD MIT 1965 White, Richard Denis 1992 Faculty Res Asst Geosciences. BA Wisconsin 1969; MA Boston Univ Wilkins, B. H. 1961 Dean College of Liberal Arts, Prof Economics. BBA Texas A & 1 1956, MS 1957; PhD Texas 1962 Will, Theodore 1990 Faculty Res Asst Food Science & Technology. BS Oregon State 1962, MS 1965 Willard, Joel 1980 Sr Faculty Res Asst Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS New Mexico Inst Mining & Technology 1971 William, Ray D. 1979 Prof Extn Horticulture. BS Washington State 1968; MS Purdue 1971, PhD 1974 Williams, Anne N. 1992 Project Admn/Research Economist-NRBAR Intl Research & Development. BA Southwestern College 1978; MS Michigan State 1987 Williams, Ellis E. 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Zoology. BS North Carolina-Wilmington 1983, MS 1987; PhD Arizona State 1992 Williams, David Edward 1986 Assoc Prof Food Science & Technology. BA Reed 1975; MS Oregon State 1981, PhD 1982 Williams, John 1986 Asst Prof Tillamook Co Extension. BS Oregon State 1975, MS 1987 Williams, Thomas 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Humboldt State 1985; MS Montana State 1990 Williams-Hanus, Janet Lynn 1966 Sr Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Washington State 1965; MS Oregon State 1971 Williamson, Kenneth Jay 1973 Prof Civil Engineering. BS Oregon State 1968, MS 1970; PhD Stanford 1973 Williamson, Stephen J. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Oregon State 1990 Williamson, Walter T. IV 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BA UC-San Diego 1988 Willis, John Marcus 1979 Sr Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Colorado State 1977; MS Oregon State 1980 Wilson, James Brian 1973 Prof Forest Products. BS SUNY-Syracuse 1964, PhD 1971 Wilson, June 1991 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. MA Scotland 1977, OPA 1980 Wilson, Mark S. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Microbiology. BS St Mary's College of Maryland 1985, MS Virginia Polytech & State University 1988 Wilson, Mark Virgil 1983 Assoc Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BA UC-Berkeley 1976; PhD Cornell 1982 Wilson, Michael A. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS U of West Florida 1990 Wilson, Robert Elliot 1957 Prof Mechanical Whitler, William A. 1992 Clinical Fellow Engineering. BS Oregon State 1955; MS Illinois Veterinary Medicine. BS Florida State 1980; DVM 1956; PhD Oregon State 1963 Florida 1985 Winkler, William, Jr. 1957 Assoc Prof Exercise & L. 1991 Faculty Res Asst Animal Whitmore, Diana Sport Science. BS Michigan 1955, MS 1960 Sciences. BS Oregon State 1991 Winner, William E. 1987 Assoc Prof Botany & Whitney, John R. 1990 Instr English Language Plant Pathology. BA Lewis & Clark 1970, MAT 1973; Institute. BA Northern Arizona 1976, MA 1984 MA South Dakota 1974; PhD Calgary 1978 Widicus, Wilbur Wilson 1964 Dept Chair & Prof Winograd, Kenneth 1990 Asst Prof Education. BA Finance & Int'l Business. BS Southern Illinois 1958; Rider College 1973; EdM Rutgers Univ 1973; EdD MBA Indiana 1959; PhD Columbia 1964 N. Colorado 1990 Wiens, Gregory D. 1991 Res Assoc (Post Dod) Winsor, Martha H. Faculty Res Asst Hatfield Microbiology. BA Occidental College 1983; PhD Marine Science Center. BS Brown Univ 1976; MS Oregon State 1991 Oregon State 1987 Wilcox, Anthony Robert 1987 Assoc Prof Exercise Wiprud, Theodore 1964 Prof Art. BA Washington & Sport Science. BA Massachusetts 1973, PhD 1980 1958; ME Central Washington State 1962; MFA Wildman, Randall C. 1985 Sr Faculty Res Asst Claremont Graduate School 1964 Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Drake 1976; MS Wisconsin 1984 1979 Wirth, Donald Shelby 1971 Director & Assoc Prof Alumni Relations. BS Oregon State 1961 Witbeck, Michael Clair 1985 Instr English Language Institute. BA Utah 1972, MA 1974; TESL UCLA 1975 Withee, Shana Colleen 1986 Assoc Prof Extension. BS Utah State 1982, MS 1986 Witters, Robert 1977 Prof Int'l Research & Development. BS Eastern Illinois 1962; MS Michigan State 1967, PhD 1970 Wittig, Hans P. P. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Oregon 1983; MS OSU 1992 Wogaman, Mariol Ruth 1968 Assoc Prof & Humanities Reference Librarian, Kerr Library. BA Linfield 1967; MLS UC-Berkeley 1968; MA Oregon 1980 Wolfe, Alan S. 1991 Assoc Prof Resident Director OSSHE Japan Study. BA Columbia 1966, MA 1971; PhD Cornell 1984 Wolfe, Scott A. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Fisheries & Wildlife. BS Ohio State 1990 Wolff, Ernest G. 1987 Assoc Prof Mechanical Engineering. BSc MIT 1956; PhD Imperial College (London)1961 Wolman, Abel G. 1992 Asst Prof (Visiting) Mathematics. BA Johns Hopkins 1985, MA 1987, PhD 1992 Wolpert, Thomas Joseph 1988 Asst Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BS Nebraska 1973; MS Purdue 1979, PhD 1983 Wong, John R. 1992 Faculty Res Asst Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Portland State 1990 Wong, Sally 1973 AsstProf & Counselor, Counseling Center. BFA Texas 1963; MSW Portland State 1969, ACSW 1971, RCSW 1978 Wood, Guy H. 1987 Assoc Prof. BS Minnesota 1971; MA New York 1973; PhD Colorado 1984 Wood, Terence Michael 1985 Assoc Prof Exercise & Sport Science. BA British Columbia 1971, BPE 1976, MPE 1979; PhD Wisconsin 1984 Woodbum, Margy Jeanette 1969, Dept Head & Prof Nutrition & Food Mgmt. BS Illinois 1950; MS Wisconsin 1956, PhD 1959 Woods, LaVerne 1976 Counselor & Recruiter Educational Opportunities Woods, Sandra L. 1984 Assoc Prof Civil Engineering, Director Hazardous Waste Mgmt. BS Michigan State 1976; MS Washington 1980, PhD 1984 Workman, William G. 1991 Asst Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BS Wyoming 1969; MA Utah State 1972, PhD 1978 Wright, David W. 1975 Physician Student Health Center. BS Seattle Pacific 1968; MD UC-Davis 1972 Wrolstad, Ronald Earl 1965 Prof Food Science & Technology. BS Oregon State 1960; PhD UC-Davis 1964 Wubben, Hubert Hollensteiner 1963 Prof History. BA Cornell College 1950, MA Iowa 1958, PhD 1963 Wykes, R. Thomas 1984 Instr Deschutes Co Extn. BS Oregon State 1977, BS 1984 Wysocki, Donald J. 1985 Assoc Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Wisconsin- Stevens Point 1974; MS Washington State 1977; PhD Iowa State 1983 Yahn, Becky L. 1990 Asst Sports Info Director Intercollegiate Athletics. BA Washington State 1985 Yamada, Sylvia Behrens 1981 Asst Prof Zoology. BSc British Columbia 1968, MSc 1971; PhD Oregon Yu, L. Shiao-Ling 1987 Assoc Prof Chinese. BA Caldwell 1958; MS Boston College 1961; MA Kansas 1977; PhD Wisconsin 1983 Chengdu (China) 1982; MS Ruhr (W. Germany) 1985, PhD 1989 Yuh, Junku 1992 Assoc Prof (Visiting) Mechanical Engineering. BS Seoul National Univ 1981; MS Oregon State 1982, PhD 1986 Yusuf, Qismullah 1991 Instr Education. BA Syiah Kuala Univ (Indonesia) 1975; MEd Oregon State Yeats, Robert S. 1977 Prof Geosciences. AB Florida 1986 1974 Yang, Xiaogen 1989 Res Assoc Ag Chemistry. BS 1952; MS Washington 1956, PhD 1958 Yim, Solomon C. S. 1987 Assoc Prof Civil Engineering. BSCE Rice 1976; MSCE UC-Berkeley 1977, MA 1981, PhD 1983 Yoder, Barbara Jane 1977-79; 1985-88; 1992 Res Assoc Forest Science. BS UC-Irvine 1972; MS Oregon State 1984, PhD 1992 Yorgey, Brian Marshall 1985 Faculty Res Asst Food Science & Technology. BS MIT 1972 Yost Melvin Lowell 1967 Coordinator of Instructional Art & Asst Prof, Communication Media Center. BS Lewis & Clark 1962 Youmans, Russell Clark 1966 Director Western Rural Development Center, Prof Ag & Resource Economics. BS Illinois 1958; MS Purdue 1962, PhD 1966 Young, John Aubrey 1972 Dept Chair & Prof Anthropology. BA Macalester College 1963; MA Hawaii 1965; PhD Stanford 1971 Zabriskie, T. Mark 1992 Asst Prof Pharmacy. BSc Utah 1985, PhD 1989 Zaen, Joe B. 1965 Asst Dept Head & Prof Forest Science. BS UC-Berkeley 1954, PhD 1964 Zaneveld, Jacques Ronald Victor 1971 Prof Oceanic & Atmospheric Sciences. BS Old Dominion 1964; SM, MIT 1966; PhD Oregon State 1971 Zauner, Christian Walter 1987 Dept Chair & Prof Exercise & Sport Science. BS Westchester State 1956; MS Syracuse 1957; PhD Southern Illinois 1963 Zautner, Jeffrey H. 1992 Assoc Prof Aerospace Studies. BS Wisconsin, 1979, MS 1983 Zaworski, Joseph Robert 1987 Instr Mechanical Engineering. BS Oregon State 1972, MS 1976 rN Young, William Clyde 1111978 Asst Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Western Illinois 1973; MS Oregon State 1980, PhD 1987 M Faculty Zhang, Zhi-Qiang 1992 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Entomology Res. BSc Fudan Univ (China) 1988; PhD Cornell 1993 Zimmerman, Anne H. 1989 Faculty Res Asst Biochemistry & Biophysics. BS Oregon State 1983 Zimmerman, Gary L. 1977 Prof Veterinary Medicine. BS Kansas State 1967, MS 1970, PhD 1973, DVM 1977 Zinn, Thomas G. 1962 Assoc Director & Prof Extn for County Programs. BS Oregon State 1956, MS 1978 Zlatanova, Jordanka 1991 Res Assoc (Post Doct) Biochemistry & Biophysics. PhD Bulgarian Academy of Sciences 1980 Zobel, Donald Bruce 1968 Prof Botany & Plant Pathology. BS North Carolina State 1964; AM Duke 1966, PhD 1968 Zollinger, William A. 1985 Assoc Prof Animal Sciences, Extn Beef Specialist. BS Brigham Young 1967; MS Oklahoma State 1970; PhD Nebraska 1981 Zvonkovic, Anisa Mary 1985 Asst Prof Human Develoment & Family Sciences. BA Virginia 1981; MS Penn State 1983, PhD 1986 Zwer, Pamela Kay 1988 Asst Prof Crop & Soil Science. BS Michigan State 1977, MS 1979; PhD UC-Davis 1986 - EO Wl r9 ae Major Lighted Corridor Administrative Serv Bldg (C6, 1) Cordley Hall (B4, 23) Gill Coliseum (E4, 45) Aero Engineering Lab (F3 , 2) Covell Hall (96, 25) Gilfllan Auditorium (B4,121) Agricultural and Life Sciences (C4, 128) Crop Science Bldg (C3, 26) Gilmore Annex (B4, 46) Dearborn Hall (B6 , 27) Gilmore Hall (C4 , 47) Apperson Hall (B7, 5) Dixon Lodge (C8, 28) Gleeson Hall (136, 19) Aquatic Center (D5, 131) Dixon Recreation Center (D5, 29) Graf Hall (136, 48) Arnold (E5, 6) Dormitory Services Bldg (E2, 30) Greenhouses East (84, 49) Asian Cultural Center (A4, 132) Dryden Hall (D3, 31) Greenhouses West (B3, 50) Avery Lodge (C8, 7) Education Hall (C6, 32) Hawley Hall (C4, 51) Electrical & Computer Eng. Bldg (B6, 58) Heating Plant (136, 52) Ballard Extension Hall (135, 33) Batcheller Hall (B6, 9) EPA Enviromental Research Lab Hinsdale Wave Research Laboratory (D1, 115) Azalea House (C8, 8) Bates Hall (B4 , 89) Beef Barn (B1, 10) Benton Hall (C6, 11) Bexell Hall (B5, 12) Black Cultural Center (B5, 13) (C2, 24) Heckart Lodge (C4, 53) McNary Hall and Dining Hall (C7, 68) Oceanography Warehouse (F4, 87) Memorial Union Bldg (C5, 69) Orchard Court Apartments (62, 88) Memorial Union East-Snell Hall (C6, 70) Merryfield Hall (86, 71) Merryfield Hall Annex (136, 72) Milam Auditorium (C5, 73) Milam Hall (C5, 74) Milne Computer Center (C6, 75) Mitchell Hall (C6, 76) Moreland Hall (D5, 77) Outdoor Recreation Center (D5 , 130) Oxford House (C8 , 90) Parker Stadium (E4 92) , Patrick Wayne Valley Field (F5, 116) Peavy Hall (D3, 93) Pharmacy Bldg (C6, 94) Motor Pool (83, 78) Plageman Bldg (Student Health Serv.) (B5, 97) EPA Office Bld g (C1 , 135) Hispanic Cultural Center (E5, 54) Nash Hall (C4 , 79) Poling Hall (D4, 98) Extension Hall Annex (B5 , 34) Horner Museum (E4, 55) Indoor Target Range (D6, 56) National Forage Seed Production Research Center (82, 38) Poultry Feeding Bldg (D2, 99) Facilities Services Office-Adams Hall (E6 , 95) Bloss Hall (E5, 14) Facilities Services Sho p s and Stores (D6, 96) Burt Hall (B4, 15) Fairbanks Hall (C4, 35) B u xton Hall (C4 , 16) Family Study Center (B4, 89) Callahan Hall (C7, 17) Finley Hall (E5, 39) Cauthorn Hall (D4, 18) Forest Entomology Lab (B2, 40) Child Care Center (D7, 129) Forest Research Lab (F3, 41) Clark Laboratory (C3, 20) College Inn (A6 , 22) Forestry Sciences Lab-USDA (D3 , 42) Computer Science Bldg (C4, 37) Gilbert Hall (B6, 43) ., Gilbert Addition (136. 44) Industrial Bldg (E6, 57) Native American Longhouse (C5, 80) Poultry Research Facilities (D2, 100) Naval Armory (D5, 81) Printing and Mailing Services (D4 , 133) Kerr Library (C6, 61) Oceanography Admin Offices (B5 , 21) Public Safety Bldg (E5, 126) Kidder Hall (C6, 62) Oceanography Core Lab (F3, 82) Intramural Track (D5, 59) Jefferson Bldg (C8, 127) Lab Animal Resource Center (D3, 63) Oceanography Geophysics Bldg (F3, 83) Langton Hall (C5, 64) Oceanography Lab (F4, 84) LaSells Stewart Center (F5, 65) Oceanography Shop Bldg (F4, 85) Magruder Hall (E3, 66) McAlexander Fieldhouse (D6 , 67) Oceanography Staging Bldg (E3, 86) Radiation Center (C2, 101) Reed Lodge (C3, 102) Rogers Hall (136 , 103) Sackett Hall (C4 , 104) Seed Lab (132 , 36) Sheep Barn (131, 105) Shepard Hall (B6, 106) LL LL Information Booth Small Animal Lab (C1, 107) Snell Hall-Memorial Union East (C6, 70) Social Science Hall (135, 108) Stock Judging Pavilion (81, 109) Strand Agriculture Hall (C5, 3) Student Health Services (85, 97) Tennis Courts (D4, 110) Traffic Bldg (E5, 4) Valley Football Center (E4, 134) Veterinary Dairy Barn (D3, 111) Veterinary Research Lab (D3, 112) Veterinary Sheep Barn (E3, 113) Waldo Hall (D5, 114) Weatherford Hall and Dining Hall (04, 117) Weniger Hall (B5, 118) West International House (D4, 119) Wiegand Hall (B3, 120) Wilkinson Hall (B4, 121) Wilson Hall (D7, 122) Wit h ycom be H a ll ( B4 , 123) Women ' s Bldg ( C4, 124) Women's Center (C6 , 125) Index 349 0 A guide to reading this catalog, 6 Academic advising, 47 Academic regulations, 24 Accounting and information management, 183 Accounting, postbaccalaureate certificate, 181 Accreditation, 3 Activities, student, 57-58 Actuarial science, 128 Administration, inside back cover Admission, 9 as a non-degree student, 11 as a post-graduate student, 11 from two-year institutions, 10 from unaccredited institutions, 12 of international students, 10, 22 of nonresidents, 9 of older students, 10 of residents, 9 of transfer students, 10 re-enrollment, 12 to graduate school, 290 to professional programs, 12 to summer session, 12 with credit for military experience, 12 with graduate standing, 11 with postbaccalaureate status, 290 Admission procedure, 12 Adult education, 254 Advanced degrees, 289 Advanced science and technology institute, 297 Advising, 2 Aquatic center, 58 Archaeology, 68 Art, 71 Art History, 71 Art, Studio 71 Art and music activities, 57 Associated students (ASOSU), 57 Astronomy, 135 Athletic administration, 229 Athletic training, 228 Athletics, intercollegiate, 58 Atmospheric sciences, 269 Attendance 25 Awards, 50 L3 B.A. degree requirements, 16 Baccalaureate core, 13-16 Baccalaureate degree requirements, 13 Basic teaching certificates, 254 Biochemistry and biophysics, 110 Biological oceanography, 265 Biology, 111 Biophysics, 135 Bioresource engineering, 191 Bioresource research, 148 Biosystems modeling, 148 Biotechnology, 149 Botany and plant pathology, 113 Business, college of, 180 Business administration, 182 Business and marketing education, 254 Business minor, 181 Communication media center, au Community college education, 255 Community health, 235, 236 Community relations, 63 Computational physics, 135 Computer engineering, 201 Computer facilities, 48 Computer science, 198 Concurrent baccalaureate degrees, 16 Concurrent enrollment, 295 Conducting, Choral, 89 Conducting, Instrumental, 89 Consortium for international development, 299 Consortium for international fisheries and aquaculture development, 299 Construction engineering management, 197 Continuing higher education, 53 Cooperative education internships, 47 Cooperative housing, 45 Cooperative institute for marine resources studies, 300 Core engineering, 191 Correspondence courses, 13 Counseling, 260 Counseling center, 47 Counselor education, 260 Course numbering system, 7 Craft center, 56 Crop science, 166 Cultural anthropology, 68 Cultural centers, 58 Cultural resource management, 221 Curriculum instruction, 255 E Aerospace studies, 283 Agriculture, 154 Agricultural business management, 159, 164 Agricultural chemistry, 161 Agricultural economics, 159 Agricultural education, 162 Agricultural experiment station, 298 Agricultural and resource economics, 158 Agricultural science, 162 Agricultural sciences, college of, 156 Alumni association, 62 American studies, 67 Animal reproduction and development, 148 Animal sciences, 163 Anthropology, 67 Apparel design, 242 Apparel, interiors, housing, and merchandising, 242 Applied exercise and sport science, 229 Applied genetics, 148 Applied health-women's health, 235 Applied health-health & gerontology, 235 Applied health-health & dependence, 235 Applied mathematics, 128 Applied physics, 135 Applying for graduation, 16 Calendar, 8 Campus map, 348 Career planning and placement, 48 Center for advanced materials research, 298 Center for analysis of environmental change, 299 Center for gene research and biotechnology, 298 Center for humanities, 299 Center for study of the first Americans, 299 Certificates, 17-19 Chemical engineering, 192 Chemical physics, 135 Chemical oceanography, 266 Chemistry, 115 Child and adolescent health, 235 Child care services, 49 Chinese, 80 Civil engineering, 194 Civil engineering-forest engineering, 197 Climbing center, 58 Collections, 59, 60 College student services administration, 259 Dairy production, 164 Dean of students, 48 Deficiencies, 24 Definitions, 6 Degree requirements, 13 Degrees with distinction, 16 Deposits, 20 Development office, 62 Dietetics, 251 Disabled students, services for, 49 Doctoral degrees, 293 14 Earning a degree, 13 Earth materials, 124 Earth science, 120 Early childhood education, 247 Economics, 73 Education program, 253 Education administration, 255 Educational opportunities program, 47 Electrical and computer engineering, 200 Electrical and electronics engineering, 201 Index 350 Emergency loans, 26 Forest recreation management, 214, 221 Forest recreation resources, 219, 221 Employment, 26 Forest research laboratory, 301 Engineering, college of, 189 Engineering experiment station, 300 Engineering physics, 135, 203 Engineering science, 191 Forest resources, 218, 221 Forest science, 222 Elementary education, 88, 120, 247 English, 76 English language institute, 49 Forest soils, 219 Forestry, college of, 212 Fraternities 36 French, 81 0 Enrollment summary, 305 Entomology, 117 Environmental chemistry, 149 Environmental engineering, 194 Environmental geosciences, 122 Environmental health, 234, 236 Environmental health and safety, 234 Environmental health sciences center, 300 Environmental remote sensing applications laboratory, 301 Individual and family development, 247 Indoor climbing facility, 58 Galleries, 60 General agriculture, 162 General business, 184 General education requirements, 13-16 General engineering, 204 General entomology, 118 General information, 3 Environmental resource interpretation, 221 Environmental science, 150 Equine production, 164 Ethnic cultural centers, 58 Exception, petitioning for, 16 Exercise and sport science, 227, 229, 231 Experimental college, 58 Extension service, 169 0 General mathematics, 128 General science, 119 Genetics, 121 Geography, 122 Geological engineering, 204 Geological oceanography, 267 Geology, 123 Geomorphology-engineering geology, 124 Geophysics, 135, 267 Geosciences, 122 German, 81 Faculty roster, 306 Family finance, 248 Family resource management, 247 Family student housing, 45 Family studies, 261 Fees and deposits, 20 Finance, 183 Finance and international business, 183 Financial aid, 26 Financial management, 183 Financial services, 183 Gerontology, 246 Grades and grading system, 24 Graduate appointments, 291 Graduate degree programs, 291 Graduate fees, 291 Graduate minors, 289 Graduate school, 288 Graduation requirements, 13-16 Grants, 25, 297 Guidelines of OSU, 3 Fitness program management, 228 Five year teacher education program, 253 Food quality, 149 Food science and technology, 173 Food systems management, 251 Foods in business, 251 Foreign languages and literatures, 79 lil Forest engineering-civil engineering, 215 Forest harvesting, 219 Honor societies, 52 Honors, 50 Forest management, 219 Horner museum, 60 products, 216, 219 0 Japanese, 82 Joint-campus program, 295 Laboratory animal resources, 301 Latin, 82 Home economics education, 250 Forest Interior merchandising, 243 International agricultural development, 162 International agriculture economics, 159 International business, 183 International degree, 152 International education, 54 International student admission, 10 Intramural sports, 58, 226 Irrigation engineering, 191 Italian, 82 Health and physical education, 226 Health care administration, 235 Health education, 226 Health promotion and education, 235 Health services, 51 Forest engineering, 214 Forensics and drama, 57 Integrated plant protection center, 301 Interdisciplinary studies, 147 Landscape design, 221 Language arts education, 77 Forest biology, 219 Foreign study programs, 54, 83 for advanced degrees, 16 for baccalaureate degrees, 13-16 for certificates, 16 for concurrent degrees, 16 for subsequent degrees, 16 Insurance, student accident and sickness, 51 Health and human performance, college of ,224 History, 85 History of OSU, 4 History of science, 87, 127 Home economics, college of, 241 Home economics communications, 248 Foreign student admission, 11 Industrial and manufacturing engineering, 204 Information management, 183 Insect pest management, 118 Institution requirements, 13-16 0 Fisheries and wildlife, 170 Fisheries/business, 171 Fishery science, 171 Horticulture/science, 175 Housing, 45-46 Housing services, 243 Housing studies, 243 Human development, 247 Human development and family sciences, 246 Human services, 87 Horticulture, 175 Latin American affairs, 87 Law enforcement, 221 Learning and resource centers, 48 Liberal arts, college of, 64 Liberal arts definitions of academic divisions, 65 Liberal studies, 88 Library, 59 Linguistics, 83 Literature, 77 Livestock production, 164 Loans, 26 Long term health care, 236 Index M.Agr., departments participating in, 292 M.A.I.S. degree, 293 Majors, 17-19 Management, 184 Management information systems, 183 Map of campus,348 Marine/freshwater biomedical center, 302 Marine resource management, 268 Marine resources, 171 Mark O. Hatfield marine science center, 301 Marketing, 184 Master's degree, 292 M.A.T. degree, 292 Mathematical physics, 135 Mathematical sciences, 128 Mathematics, 127 Occupational safety, 234, 236 Oceanic and atmospheric science, college of, 262 Oceanography, 265 Off-campus housing, 46 Office of dean of students, 48 Optical physics, 135 Oregon productivity and technology center, 302 Oregon state system of higher education, inside back cover OSU foundation, 62 OSU press, 63 Overseas study centers, 54 0 Meals, 45 Mechanical engineering, 206 Medical history requirement, 51 Medicinal chemistry and natural products chemistry, 273 Memorial union, 56 Merchandising management, 243 Metallurgical engineering, 208 Meteorology, 131, 269 Microbiology, 132, 170 Military science, 285 Mining engineering, 208 Minority cultural centers, 58 Minors, 17-19 Mission of the university, 3 Molecular and cellular biology, 133 Multicultural affairs, 47 Museums, galleries, and collections, 60 Music, 88 Music activities, 57 Music education, 91 Music, performance, 89 Music, studio instruction, 92 National student exchange, 49 Natural resources, 151 Natural history, 221 Naval science, 286 New student programs, 47 News and communication services, 63 Nonresident and resident fees, 20 Nuclear engineering, 208 Nuclear engineering technology, 210 Nuclear science and engineering institute, 302 Numerical analysis, 128 Nutrition and food management, 250 Nutrition science, 251 Nutrition research institute, 302 351 Public administration, 219, 221 Public education/extension, 171 Public health, 233 Publications, official, 63 Publications, student, 57 Pulp and paper technology, 219 Pure mathematics, 128 0 RV Wecoma, 265 Radiation center, 302 Radiation health, 210 Radio and television, 57 Range/forest/fire management, 178 Range management, 178, 219 Range resources, 221 Range science, 178 Range/soils, 178 Peace studies, 92 Range/wildlife, 178 Pest biology and management, 149 Pest management, 118 Pharmacology and toxicology, 274 Pharmacy practice, 274 Pharmacy, college of, 270 Philosophy, 93, 219 Physical activity, 230 Physical activity and development, 228 Physical anthropology, 67 Physical oceanography, 267 Physical education, 227 Rangeland resources, 177 Readmission, 13 Recreational sports, 58 Physics, 134 Placement examination, 12 Placement service, 48 Plant growth and development, 149 Plant physiology, 149, 295 PLUS loan, 26 Political science, 95 Portuguese, 82 Postbaccalaureate students, 290 Poultry production, 164 Pre-civil engineering, 193 Pre-dental hygiene, 137 Pre-dentistry, 137 Pre-elementary education, 88, 120 Prel-aw, 67 Pre-medical, 138 Pre-medical technology, 137 Pre-medicine and osteopathy, 138 Pre-nursing, 138 Pre-occupational therapy, 139 Pre-optometry, 139 Pre-pharmacy program, 273 Pre-physical therapy, 139 Pre-podiatry, 140 Pre-professional programs, 137 Pre-therapy, 229 Pre-veterinary medicine, 140, 164 Probation, 24 Psychology, 97 Re-enrolling students, 13 Refunds, 20 Registration procedures, 12 Requirements for baccalaureate degrees, 13 Research, 296 Research vessels, 265 Reserve officers training corps, 282 Residence halls, 45 Residence requirement, 13 Residency, 20-23 Resource economics, 159-221 Resource planning, 222 Room and board, 45 ROTC, 282 Russian, 82 Russian studies, 99 p Scholarship regulations, 27 Scholarships, 27-44, 284, 286, 287 School counseling, 260 School physical education, 227 Science and mathematics education, 141 Science, college of 108 Scientific and technical communication, 99 Sea grant college program, 303 Secondary education, 253 Sedimentary geology, 124 Sociology, 100 Soil science, 166 Sororities, 46 Spanish, 83 Special fees, 20 Special services project, 47 Special students, 10 Speech communication, 102 352 Index Sports leadership, 229 Standard teaching certificates, 254 Statistics, 142, 219 Structure-tetonics-geophysics, 124 Student activities, 57 Student conduct regulations, 25 Student exchange program, 54 Student family housing, 45 Student government, 57 Student health center, 51 Student media, 57 Student records, 25 Study abroad, 54-55 Summary of enrollment, 305 Traffic safety education, 236 Transfer students, 10 Transportation research institute, 303 W Turf and landscape management, 175 Twentieth-century studies, 105 University archives, 59 University computing services, 299 University corporation for atmospheric research, 303 University exploratory studies program, 47 University graduation requirements, 13-16 University marketing conferences and special Surveying and mapping, 194 Suspension, 24 events, 63 University publications, 63 University relations, 63 University requirements, 13-16 Sustainable ecosystems, 149 0 Veterinary medicine, college of, 276 Tuition, 20 Tuition deposits, 20 Tuition refunds, 20 It Summer session, 53 Summer session housing, 46 Survey research center, 303 Veterinary medicine (preprofessional), 140, 164, 276 Water resources research institute, 304 Western rural development center, 304 Western undergraduate exchange program, 50 WICHE regional graduate programs, 295 WICHE student exchange program, 50 Wildland ecology, 178 Wildlife resources, 219, 222 Wildlife science, 171 Women studies, 106 Women's center, 49 Wood engineering and science, 217 Wood and fiber technology, 217 Wood industry management, 217 Wood industry process and management, 217 Worksite health promotion, 235, 236 Work-study, 30 Writing, 78 0 Teacher certification, 254 Teacher education, 254 Theatre arts, 103 Tourism, 222 Toxicology, 150, 294 Veterans, progress standards for, 25 Veterans services, 47 4 N Zoology, 144 OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY As of February, 1993 John V. Byrne, President Roy G. Arnold, Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs John M. Dunn, Associate Provost for Academic Affairs M. Lee Schroeder, Chief Business Officer of Finance and Administration (Interim) George H. Keller, Vice Provost for Research, Extension, and International Programs Jo Anne J. Trow, Vice Provost for Student Affairs M. Lynn Spruill, Executive Director for Insti- tutional Advancement Dean of Graduate School J. Roger Penn, Dean of Students Thomas J. Maresh, Kathleen Mulligan, Director, Facilities Morris LeMay, Director of Counseling and Testing Center William C. Edwards, Director of Memorial Union and Educational Activities Barbara Balz, Registrar Russell Dix, Associate Registrar Kay Conrad, Director of Admissions Daniel B. Dunham, Director OSU Continuing Higher Education Debbie Bird, Assistant Director for Summer Session Keith McCreight, Director of Financial Aid Director of Student Housing and Residence Programs Melvin R. George, Librarian, William Jasper Tom Scheuerman, Kerr Library Janet Webster, Librarian, Marilyn Potts Guinn Library Director and Physician Student Health Services John Van de Water, Director of International Education Jayne Ackerman, OREGON STATE SYSTEM OF HIGHER EDUCATION The Oregon State System of Higher Education, organized in 1932, provides educational opportunities for people throughout the state of Oregon. Opportunities for general education are distributed as widely as possible through-out the state, with specialized, professional, and technical programs centered at specific institutions. Members of the Oregon State System of Higher Education Eastern Oregon State College, La Grande Oregon Health Sciences University (Schools of Dentistry, Medicine, and Nursing), Portland Oregon Institute of Technology, Klamath Falls Oregon State University, Corvallis Portland State University, Portland Southern Oregon State College, Ashland University of Oregon, Eugene Western Oregon State College, Monmouth Through the Chancellor's Office of Academic Affairs, special attention is given to providing leadership, coordination, and service to assure that a broad-based continuing education program is available through the several institutions. An interinstitutional booklet, "The Oregon College Guide," lists fields of study at all state system institutions and gives other important information for prospective students. For a free copy, write "The Oregon College Guide," State Board of Higher Education, P.O. Box 3175, Eugene, Oregon 97403. State Board of Higher Education Members* The Oregon State System of Higher Education is governed by the Oregon State Board of Higher Education, whose members are appointed by the governor with confirmation by the state senate. Terms are four years for regular members and two years for student members. Terms expire June 30. Robert L. Bailey, The Dalles, President (1996) Janice J. Wilson, Vice President, Portland, Vice President (1995) Robert R. Adams, Corvallis, Executive Committee Member (1993) Britteny S. Davis, Portland (1993) Mark S. Dodson, Portland (1993) Richard Donahue, Beaverton (1996) Beverly Jackson, Medford (1995) Walter Rob Miller, Salem, Executive Committee Member (1996) George E. Richardson, Jr., Portland, Executive Committee Member (1994) Leslie M. Swanson, Jr., Portland (1993) Laurie Yokota, Monmouth (1994) OSSHE Administration Thomas Barlett, Chancellor Weldon Ihrig, Vice Chancellor for Finance and Administration Shirley Clark, Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs Larry O. Large, Vice Chancellor for Public Affairs Owen, Vice Chancellor for OCATE S. John Virginia Thompson, Board Secretary and Executive Assistant to the Chancellor Equal Opportunity Oregon State University, in compliance with state and federal laws and regulations, does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, sexual orientation, marital status, age, or disability or veteran's status in any of its policies, procedures, or practices. This nondiscrimination policy covers admission and access to, and treatment and employment in, University programs and activities, including but not limited to academic admissions, financial aid, educational services, and employment. Inquiries regarding the University's equal oppotunity policies may be directed to the Affirmative Action office (503) 737-3556. Oregon State University Second Class Postage General Catalog 1993-94 PAID Published by the Oregon State System of Higher Education at Corvallis, Oregon 97331 Corvallis, OR 97331 GENERAL INFORMATION LIBERAL ARTS SCIENCE INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES BUSINESS ENGINEERING FORESTRY HEALTH & HUMAN PERFORMANCE HOME ECONOMICS AND EDUCATION OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES PHARMACY VETERINARY MEDICINE RESERVE OFFICER TRAINING CORPS GRADUATE SCHOOL RESEARCH FACULTY i r