The People's School: A History of Oregon State University by William G. Robbins

2018 ◽  
Vol 119 (3) ◽  
pp. 432-435
Author(s):  
Jean Ward
Author(s):  
Peter A. Kopp

This chapter focuses largely on Alfred Haunold, Ph.D., a plant breeder employed by the USDA and housed at Oregon State University in Corvallis from the 1960s to the 1990s. Haunold’s work in breeding the first hybrid American hops helped save the industry in the Willamette Valley. Not only were his hybrids disease resistant, but they also appealed to brewers. The chapter suggest that Haunold’s efforts can only be understood in a larger historical context, however, and along with his biography it offers a longer history of the hop breeding efforts in Corvallis that dated to 1930. These connections to early periods of professionalization are essential in understanding how the continuity of specialty crop agriculture offers a sense of place or sense of history.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashley Hanna ◽  
Susanne M. Stieger-Vanegas ◽  
Jerry R. Heidel ◽  
Melissa Esser ◽  
John Schlipf ◽  
...  

Sinonasal neoplasia metastasizing to distant organs is rare in horses. This case report describes the clinical and imaging findings of a horse with sinonasal neoplasia, which had metastasized to the lung, liver, and humerus. Additionally, the prevalence of sinonasal neoplasia and their incidence of distant metastasis among horses that presented to the Oregon State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital (OSU-VTH) were estimated. Of 5,558 equine patients who presented to the OSU-VTH in the last nine years, 1.4% were diagnosed with sinonasal disease and 10.3% of these cases had sinonasal neoplasia with only one having confirmed distant metastasis. This case was an eleven-year-old quarter horse which was evaluated due to a history of a right forelimb lameness of three weeks duration. Two and a half months later he presented again, this time for unilateral epistaxis and persistent right forelimb lameness. Radiography of the right elbow noted an increasingly irregular, periosteal response and osteolytic lesion of the right distal humeral condyle. At the time of the second presentation, nasosinal endoscopy identified a lobulated mass in the region of the ethmoid turbinates. Histopathology of this mass revealed an adenocarcinoma of nasal origin with metastasis to the lung, liver, and right humerus.


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