advertising
print page Print  email page Email 


Other Articles

Heavy Metal Mania

Car collectors are drawn to the smooth lines, the storied pasts, the powerful engines ... gas...


The Human Factor

Tech services firm Allyis treats workers like real people,

and - surprise! - they stick around


Where the Customer is King

At Moneytree, staff and management are on the same page


Time Bandits

It's time to rein in e-mail use and reclaim our real lives


Out of the Shadow

No longer just a Portland suburb, Vancouver begins to shine


Tour Vancouver

Take a slideshow tour of Vancouver, Wash., Washington's fourth-largest city, with additional...


Hit the Deck

New and unusual options in outdoor dining


Bookend

Executive Decision

Megan Murphy

What book should every businessperson be reading right...


Learning From the Greats

Leaders come in many forms, but great leaders all have something in common


WSU Gets Into the Human Race

A new biotechnology company being launched out of Accelerator Corp., a business incubator in Seattle, is seeking to commercialize technology developed at Washington State University. Commercializing university research is not unusual for a start-up, except that this time, the biotech coming out of Pullman is expected to lead to cancer treatment for humans. This is a first for the landgrant university, whose traditional areas of expertise are in agricultural, veterinary and bioenergy sciences rather than human-based biomedical science. The technology is expected to yield therapies that arrest the spread of cancerous tumors. Research director for the start-up company, Recodagen, will be J. Suzanne Lindsey, the WSU researcher who first developed the technology. Recodagen has raised an undisclosed amount of initial seed funding, making it the first venture-funded start-up to come out of WSU's technology licensing program.

 

Comments

Leave a Reply


If you can't read the word, click here.

CAPTCHA image for SPAM prevention

advertising

© Washington CEO Magazine 2008