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Graduate Student

A Monarch butterfly rests on Miyauna Incarnato’s hand. Incarnato is a graduate student in Entomology studying Monarch butterflies. March 8, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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A Monarch butterfly rests on Miyauna Incarnato’s hand. Incarnato is a graduate student in Entomology studying Monarch butterflies. March 8, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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A Monarch butterfly rests on the flower of a tropical milkweed in an East Campus greenhouse. Miyauna Incarnato is a graduate student in Entomology studying Monarch butterflies. March 8, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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A Monarch butterfly rests on Miyauna Incarnato’s hand. Incarnato is a graduate student in Entomology studying Monarch butterflies. March 8, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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A Monarch butterfly flies out of Miyauna Incarnato’s hand in an East Campus greenhouse full of tropical milkweed. Incarnato is a graduate student in Entomology studying Monarch butterflies. March 8, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Tamayo Zhou for APIDA Heritage Month story. Zhou poses in front of the Jackie Gaughan Multicultural Center. April 27, 2021. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Tamayo Zhou for Husker Dialogues. Zhou poses in front of the Selleck Quadrangle. April 27, 2021. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Memory Manda, a master’s student in the Department of Sociology, is focusing her Nebraska-based research on Kaposi sacroma, a skin cancer that is the second-most common cancer in Zambia. This is part of a weekly student conversation series highlighted as part of Black History Month on the University of Nebraska–Lincoln's Medium page. The series features students who are making impacts on campus and hope to maintain that momentum in future careers. January 29, 2021. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Memory Manda, a master’s student in the Department of Sociology, is focusing her Nebraska-based research on Kaposi sacroma, a skin cancer that is the second-most common cancer in Zambia. This is part of a weekly student conversation series highlighted as part of Black History Month on the University of Nebraska–Lincoln's Medium page. The series features students who are making impacts on campus and hope to maintain that momentum in future careers. January 29, 2021. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
210129 Manda 120
Memory Manda, a master’s student in the Department of Sociology, is focusing her Nebraska-based research on Kaposi sacroma, a skin cancer that is the second-most common cancer in Zambia. This is part of a weekly student conversation series highlighted as part of Black History Month on the University of Nebraska–Lincoln's Medium page. The series features students who are making impacts on campus and hope to maintain that momentum in future careers. January 29, 2021. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
210129 Manda 115
Memory Manda, a master’s student in the Department of Sociology, is focusing her Nebraska-based research on Kaposi sacroma, a skin cancer that is the second-most common cancer in Zambia. This is part of a weekly student conversation series highlighted as part of Black History Month on the University of Nebraska–Lincoln's Medium page. The series features students who are making impacts on campus and hope to maintain that momentum in future careers. January 29, 2021. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Memory Manda, a master’s student in the Department of Sociology, is focusing her Nebraska-based research on Kaposi sacroma, a skin cancer that is the second-most common cancer in Zambia. This is part of a weekly student conversation series highlighted as part of Black History Month on the University of Nebraska–Lincoln's Medium page. The series features students who are making impacts on campus and hope to maintain that momentum in future careers. January 29, 2021. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Mia Luong, a graduate student in entomology, creates intricate 3D insect art in her free time. She plans to use the art to raise funds for the Bruner Club. July 8, 2020. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Daniel Ciobanu, Associate Professor of Animal Sciences, and Lianna Walker, graduate student in biological sciences, have identified the gene associated with the susceptibility of pigs to Porcine circovirus 2. December 12, 2018. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Sophie Payne, doctoral student in biological sciences, has co-authored a study showing that single-celled organisms known as archaea can pass on traits even without changes in their DNA. This phenomenon, known as epigenetics, was found in a species that eats crystalline sulfur (pictured at front). November 20, 2018. Photo by Greg Nathan, University Communication.
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Sophie Payne, doctoral student in biological sciences, has co-authored a study showing that single-celled organisms known as archaea can pass on traits even without changes in their DNA. This phenomenon, known as epigenetics, was found in a species that eats crystalline sulfur (pictured at front). November 20, 2018. Photo by Greg Nathan, University Communication.
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Sophie Payne, doctoral student in biological sciences, has co-authored a study showing that single-celled organisms known as archaea can pass on traits even without changes in their DNA. This phenomenon, known as epigenetics, was found in a species that eats crystalline sulfur (pictured at front). November 20, 2018. Photo by Greg Nathan, University Communication.
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Graduate student Waseem Hussain from India, for Growing Magazine. Photo by Craig Chandler February 29, 2016.
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Ordering Instructions

All photos are available to UNL departments at no charge. Email the titles of the photos to Craig Chandler or Monica Myers.

cchandler2@unl.edu
mmyers2@unl.edu

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