advertisement
On TechRepublic: 19 words you don't want in your resume
Find Articles in:
all
Business
Reference
Technology
News
Sports
Health
Autos
Arts
Home & Garden

Content provided in partnership with
Thomson / Gale

Biotech People

BT Catalyst,  June, 2000  

* Russell Young has been named a sales director for BioSpace.com of San Francisco. Young, who will manage southeast U.S. sales for the life-science industry Web site, will be based in Raleigh. He was previously the international sales director for The Bretton Woods Co. of Raleigh.

* Francis Neary has joined EnSolve Biosystems of Raleigh as a special consultant for maritime strategic partnerships and business development. Neary was previously with Mackay Communications of Raleigh for 13 years, most recently as president and chief operating officer. Mackay is one of the maritime industry's leading distributors of communications, navigation and engine room monitoring equipment.

Most Popular Articles in Technology
An overview of continuous data protection
Why all those current ratings?
Many countries now have a mobile penetration rate above 100%, report says
The Tata Group's big telecom gamble: VSNL's recent acquisition of Tyco ...
MEASURING BANK BRANCH EFFICIENCY USING DATA ENVELOPMENT ANALYSIS: MANAGERIAL ...
More »
advertisement

* James C. Mullen has been named president and chief executive officer of Biogen Inc. of Cambridge, Mass. He succeeds James L. Vincent, who will continue as chairman of the board of directors of Biogen, which maintains manufacturing facilities in Research Triangle Park. Mullen joined the company in 1989 as director of facilities and engineering.

* A. M. Pappas & Associates of Research Triangle Park has named Francis I. Meyer to head up a new unit aimed at identifying and commercializing life science technologies emerging from universities and colleges. The new Enterprise Group will work closely with research-intensive universities in the U.S. and Canada to identify and prioritize life science technologies that have large commercial potential, and to find commercial partners that are equipped to develop the technology. Since 1996, Meyer has served as associate vice provost and director of the Office of Technology Development at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

COPYRIGHT 2000 North Carolina Biotechnology Center
COPYRIGHT 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning