Chamber public affairs director taking new job...
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Chamber public affairs director taking new job
Doug Stuckey, a familiar face at the Newport Beach Chamber of
Commerce, has announced his resignation to pursue a career at Wells
Fargo Bank.
Stuckey, the chamber’s public affairs director, will begin work as
a regional marketing consultant in Wells Fargo’s Irvine office on
March 17.
The 27-year-old Stuckey, who graduated from Newport Harbor High
School in 1993, said he has enjoyed his more than four years working
for the city’s lead promoter and advocate for local business.
“It was a great situation to work in and promote a city you grew
up in,” Stuckey said. “It has been a great experience here.”
Chamber President Richard Luehrs hired Stuckey in 1998, when he
was the communications director for then-Assemblywoman Marilyn
Brewer.
Luehrs credited him with raising the chamber’s profile with city
leaders and state representatives.
“We wish him all the success in the world,” Luehrs said. “He has
meant a lot to the chamber.”
Stuckey was a kicker on Newport Harbor’s football that lost to
Irvine High School in the CIF championship game.
Stuckey studied communications and political science at Oregon
State University, where he played as the Beavers’ starting punter and
kicker. He graduated with a degree in speech and communications.
Stuckey lives in Costa Mesa with wife Molly, whom he married in
January.
-- Paul Clinton
UCI gets $2.6 million for spinal cord research
The National Institutes of Health awarded a five-year,
$2.6-million grant to the Reeve-Irvine Research Center at UC Irvine
to confirm new findings in spinal cord injury research.
The grant marks the first time that the National Institutes have
funded a center’s research based on key findings, and only the second
time in the country that a center has been awarded a grant for it.
By taking that step, the National Institutes have moved toward a
new initiative that will help propel breaking research as it first
becomes available.
The grant it will not only push the Reeve-Irvine Center’s
laboratory research in the regeneration of injured nerves and the
enhancing of genes that promote nerve cell growth or block other
genes that code for growth-inhibiting molecules, it will also allow
them to develop new methods to track the use of experimental spinal
cord injury treatments in animals.
Researchers in the center, established in 1996, study the effects
of spinal cord injury and spinal diseases to find their cures.
-- Christine Carrillo
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