Mr.
C. David Carr
Mr. Carr has over twenty-five years experience in the
analytical technology field and is an expert in High Performance Liquid
Chromatography. He is very familiar with capillary electrophoresis and
mass spectrometry as applied to the analysis of polypeptides. David has
provided instruction on HPLC and the use of HPLC in the analysis and
characterization of polypeptides for many years. He has a facility for
explaining the concepts and practices involved in the analysis of
polypeptides in a manner that makes them clear and easy to understand.
Course attendees can anticipate a very educational, yet entertaining,
presentation with ample opportunity for discussion and questions.
Dr.
Lee N. Polite
Dr. Polite has been teaching chromatography short
courses for over 15 years. Lee is the National Instructor for the
American Chemical Society's popular Fundamentals of HPLC courses. He has
also taught courses for the FDA, FBI Academy, and several industrial
clients. Before becoming lab director for Axion, Lee spent 9 years with
Amoco Corporation with a variety of responsibilities.
Professor
Harold McNair
Dr. McNair is a professor of Analytical Chemistry at
Virginia Tech in Blacksburg and has been involved in GC since 1960. He
developed one of the first chromatography short courses over 30 years
ago and has been teaching ever since. He was instrumental in the
start-up of the chromatography divisions of both Hewlett Packard and
Varian. He has consulted for the FDA, FBI, FAA, CODEX, and numerous
industrial organizations. Professor McNair has trained 50 graduates
students in chromatography with 200 publications and countless national
and international awards.
Dr.
Nicholas H. Snow
Nicholas H. Snow is currently Professor and Chair of Department of
Chemistry and Biochemistry at Seton Hall University. He received a B.S.
in Chemistry at the University of Virginia and a Ph.D. at Virginia Tech.
He served as mass spectrometrist in the Department of Pathology and
Lecturer in Chemistry at the University of Virginia prior to joining
Seton Hall in 1994. He maintains a research group with active projects
in gas and liquid chromatography and sample preparation, with focus on
developing new and improved sampling methods and on rapid separation
techniques, especially for pharmaceutical and environmental analysis.
The Seton Hall Board of Regents has recognized him twice for teaching
and service excellence. In 2001, he performed sabbatical research at the
Robert Wood Johnson Pharmaceutical Research Institute and he served as
President of the Eastern Analytical Symposium, Inc.