Duke GCC
@duke_gcc
The official Twitter account for the Graduate Chemistry Council at Duke University
ID: 751103274271514624
https://taplink.cc/dukegcc 07-07-2016 17:19:10
179 Tweet
110 Followers
62 Following
Congratulations to second-year graduate student Alexis Johnson (Alexis Johnson) for being selected for the prestigious U.S. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship!! This award recognizes Alexis's accomplishments to date, as well as her tremendous potential as a scientist. Congrats, Alexis!!!
Congratulations Carlos Monteagudo on recently passing his PhD candidacy prelim exam Duke University Chemistry. Keep an eye out for his work identifying targets of Cu toxicity in fungi! Awesome job Carlos.
Another PhD candidate! Congratulations Madeline Merriman for a great job passing her Duke University Chemistry prelim exam. In honor of external committee member and collaborator Elisa Tomat, we chose an Italian Prosecco to celebrate 🍾🥳
For me, hooding a PhD graduate is one of the highest honors of the profession. So proud of what Mikey Kwon has and continues to accomplish and honored to be included in his journey. 🧪🎓⚗️
I’m incredibly honored to be hooded by Amanda Hargrove this past weekend. The accomplishments and the career I have would have been difficult to attain without your and Jennifer Roizen’s mentorship and immense support. So from bottom of my heart, thank you.
Had a great afternoon yesterday attending the North Carolina School of Science & Mathematics summer mentorship program symposium. Especially proud of Swara who presented on her summer project with Amy Robison and I! What a fun summer!
It's the Hargrove Lab's 10 year anniversary today! Reflecting on the journey and the AMAZING student and postdoc lab members Duke University Chemistry Duke Department of Biochemistry , I feel so proud of what we built together - from fundamental discoveries in small molecule:RNA targeting ... 1/n
How centering my creativity helps my science "I was convinced that my creative outlets complemented my science rather than detracting from it," writes Amy Robison in this week's #ScienceWorkingLife. fal.cn/3At6n