Looking for a job or internship at a local tech or life science company? WRAL TechWire has you covered.
Last month, we introduced a new weekly feature to keep our readers posted on local job and internship opportunities. Every Monday, we round up the latest information from the region’s top job boards, offering a breakdown of how many jobs are posted, which companies are hiring and for what positions. We’ve also included upcoming job fairs, student-centric resources from local colleges and universities, and a list of Twitter accounts that track local job openings.
Below, we’ll highlight what’s new on local job boards since last week’s roundup. (Click on the subheadings to visit the job boards directly.)
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By Sarah Tate
Feb 26, 2021
If you think your water smells like a swimming pool over the next few weeks, don t worry. It s all part of an annual flushing of the water distribution system in Raleigh and surrounding areas, the city announced Thursday (February 25). Starting at 10 a.m. Saturday (February 27), Raleigh Water will temporarily stop adding ammonia to its water treatment disinfecting process in order to follow federal and state-mandated requirements. The normal process will resume at 10 a.m. April 13.
For three weeks each year, the public water systems switch from chloramine disinfection to chlorine-only disinfection, as recommended by the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality. This may result in water that can smell and taste like chlorine. Despite this, the City of Raleigh reminds residents that the water will remain absolutely safe during this process. Those who wish to do so can boil or filter the water before use.
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What is often left aside are the progressive battles that Daniels and his paper fought and often won in a deeply conservative state during the last century.
How could one of North Carolina’s most important political leaders be both a progressive champion for education and economic development and, at the same time, the leader of the white supremacy movement in our state? N.C. State Professor Lee Craig wrestled with this challenging question in his book, “Josephus Daniels: His Life and Times” (UNC Press, 2013).
Professor Craig struggled with this seeming contradiction: “I had to confront the fact that the most consistently progressive American political leader between the Civil War and the Cold War was also the father of Jim Crow.”
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