McKissack & McKissack Taps Sam Boye and Girard Jenkins for Key Midwest Roles
Seasoned operations and project executives bring deep experience to commercial, infrastructure, education and landmark public projects
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CHICAGO, May 5, 2021 /PRNewswire/ National architecture, engineering and construction management firm McKissack & McKissack is adding depth to its team by hiring Sam Boye Jr. as operations manager for the Midwest and West regions of the country and promoting Girard Jenkins to project executive for the Midwest.
McKissack & McKissack names Sam Boye Jr. as operations manager for the Midwest and West regions and promotes Girard Jenkins to project executive for the Midwest.
This past March, I had the pleasure of presenting alongside Dr. Jason P. Chambers at GTB s Ads Need Soul Conference. He was, as always, a tough act to follow. In addition to being associate department head of the Charles H. Sandage Department of Advertising at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and a dynamic and highly sought-after speaker, Dr. Chambers has a gift for angling history like a prism; through his meticulous research and analysis, he refracts the blinding light of our chaotic present into a more structured spectrum. And, this time, the most important beam was green.
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Almost half of working mothers in Illinois have lost jobs, hours during COVID: survey
By FOX 32 Digital Staff
Published
Your Take: Women voice hardships, challenges exacerbated by the pandemic
A panel of FOX 32 viewers ranging from a variety of trades and backgrounds share their experiences as women during the pandemic.
CHICAGO - A new survey of working mothers in Illinois found that nearly half of them have felt the financial crunch of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The study, which surveyed over 1,000 working mothers, was conducted by the Project for Middle Class Renewal at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the Illinois Economic Policy Institute.
Some bacteria-killing viruses spell out their genetic instructions in a different DNA alphabet.
More than 40 years ago, scientists in Russia reported that a type of bacteriophage called cyanophage S-2L replaces the DNA building block adenine, commonly known as A, with 2-aminoadenine, designated Z. But no one knew how the phage went from A to Z, or why.
Science.
The findings have implications for the origins of life on Earth, the search for life on other planets and multiple potential applications in biomedicine, synthetic biology, material sciences and computing, says Farren Isaacs, a molecular and synthetic biologist at Yale University who coauthored a commentary in the same issue of