Manufacturing
Calendar
CEOs will share insight at Manufacturing Summit The chief executive officers of five prominent southeastern Wisconsin manufacturing companies will...
Manufacturing people in the news
Gehl Co. recently appointed Ed Delaporte to the position of vice president, information technology. Delaporte previously held a number...
Resources
Manufacturer Associations Association of Equipment Manufacturers National Fluid Power Association ...
Made in Milwaukee
Sign of the times Even though they might not know it, almost everyone in Milwaukee is familiar with the...
Calendar
IndustryWeek's 2008 Best Plants Conference, April 1-3, Midwest Airlines Center, 400 W. Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee; event includes optional plant...
Manufacturing people in the news
Acuity adds Mauer to board Acuity Insurance has named Lisa Mauer, owner and president of Milwaukee-based Tool Service Corp,...
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Manufacturing Odds & Ends
Gehl VP and CFO resigns West Bend-based Gehl Co. announced that Thomas Rettler has resigned as vice president and chief financial...
Wisconsin Manufacturing News
Burke to succeed Rayburn at Modine Modine Manufacturing Co. announced that David Rayburn will retire as president and chief...
Analogix moves forward after sale
Analogix Inc., a Burlington-based manufacturer of flash chromatography equipment used for pharmaceutical and chemical research, has been sold to Varian Inc., a Palo Alto, Calif.-based company that makes scientific instruments and equipment. The transaction closed in November, 2007. Varian paid about $11 million cash for the company, which was owned by Nick DeMarco, its founder. Since the purchase, DeMarco has become Varian's business manager for flash chromatography.
Quad/Graphics to expand West Allis facility
Quad/Graphics Inc. will expand its Wisconsin operations with two major construction projects: a 192,000-square-foot expansion of its West Allis plant for the company's growing direct mail operations; and, as previously announced, a new 388,800-square-foot distribution center in Menomonee Falls for cross-docking freight produced in its five Wisconsin plants.