Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
Initiative Home People Research Clusters Postdoc Program Funding News & Events News & Events expand_more 2017 Symposium Resources Breadcrumbs Home chevron_right Postdoc Program Postdoctoral Program More
-
While at UNC-Chapel Hill, 2022 AOB Postdoc Alexandria Bredar, PhD conducted research with a focus on contributing to a carbon-neutral, recyclable energy infrastructure, working to answer
-
pressure piping systems. Reclaims and recycles all types of refrigerants. Diagnoses and assists in the repair of related DDC and pneumatic control systems. Interprets mechanical plans and prints and updates
-
Work with electrical distribution systems and equipment (up to 15KV) that include, but is not limited to, underground manholes and ductbanks, control wiring and power cable systems, distribution type
-
accountable for the regulatory compliance of the electric distribution system and the Spill Prevention Control and Countermeasure program regarding liquid transformers as well as compliance with any internal
-
management system including, but not limited to: ensuring cost control and mitigation of loss prevention, completion of weekly inventory audits; maintenance of appropriate inventory levels based on menu needs
-
Director of FacultyServices. Position Description Communications Responsible for management and quality control of high-level email account for faculty. Composes and edits emails, letters, memos, reports and
-
to the Customer Identification Program (CIP) Policy, report suspicious activity to the BSA Officer, perform Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) inquiries, complete compliance courses, and branch robbery
-
at Harvard, including operating and optimizing the imaging pipeline, developing high-throughput quality control workflows, as well as performing downstream data analysis. The imaging pipeline involves a custom
-
, ranging from the evolution and control of gene expression patterns within individuals and populations to the dynamics of ecosystems. Field and laboratory studies are key to understanding the evolution