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Lathrop became a research assistant at the University of Wyoming where she focused her efforts on research pertaining to poisonous plants that grew on the Great Plains. In 1944, Lathrop and her family moved to Chicago where Clarence pursued a medical degree at Northwestern University. [5] They officially divorced in 1976.
Scientists from New Jersey. Subcategories. This category has the following 8 subcategories, out of 8 total. * Scientists from Paterson, New Jersey (1 C, 13 P) B.
Katherine Brown (psychologist), professor; Katherine Brown (cricketer) (born 1953), English former cricketer; Katherine Whelan Brown (1872–1942), the first female Democrat elected to the New Jersey State Legislature; Katherine Browning (1864–1946), New Zealand teacher; Katherine Brunson, professor and zooarchaeologist
Katherine A. Jones is a professor of regulatory biology and the Edwin K. Hunter Chair at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies. She uses proteomics to study transcription elongation and molecular biology to understand protein coordination. Jones identified elongation factors, a class of proteins which are important in viral gene expression.
Upon completing her formal education, Suding accepted a faculty position at the University of California, Irvine (UC Irvine). During her tenure, she was named a Distinguished Assistant Professor Award for Research in 2007 [4] and received the 2008-09 Distinguished Assistant Professor Award for Research for her project "Forays into the Field: Local Impacts of Global Biological Change."
Upon completing her PhD, Hoadley continued to study the complexity of breast cancer as a Research Assistant Professor at UNC. [2] While serving in this role, she worked alongside D. Neil Hayes to document four molecular subtypes of squamous cell cancer for the first time. [4]
She was an assistant professor at Princeton University from 1986 to 1991, and then an associate professor (1991–1997) and full professor (1997–present) at the University of Oregon. She moved to the University of Bristol in 2011 on a research professorship funded by the AXA insurance.
She was the associate dean for graduate programs at the University of Virginia School of Engineering and Applied Science, currently a professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering. [ 2 ] Thornton was inducted in the United States Astronaut Hall of Fame in 2010.