The News Review:
- Review: ‘Baby Mama’ is just OK even with great chemistry…
- Chemistry experiement forces school evacuation
- Seniors at USI go CSI
- Exotic Quantum State Of Matter Discovered
Review: ‘Baby Mama’ is just OK even with great chemistry…
MLive.com – Apr 25, 2008
open(urlwinnameoptions) newwin. John Serba expresses admiration for Tina Fey star of “Baby Mama” in his review of the film:Her offbeat allure is easy to pin down.
Chemistry experiement forces school evacuation
WHOI – Apr 25, 2008
EAST PEORIA — Students at East Peoria Community High School had to be evacuated Friday morning after chemical fumes triggered the alarm system. School officials say a teacher was prepping a chemistry lab when the chemical became too much for the ventilation system. Fire crews helped evacuate the students as the school was aired out. After about twenty minutes the students were able to go back to class.
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Seniors at USI go CSI
courierpress.com – Apr 25, 2008
But based on what we are seeing I’d keep looking” said Associate Professor Mark Krahling. That’s why Krahling said even though the current semester ends next month he will continue analyzing the sample results with future classes. “One of the things I’ve taken from the study of chemistry as a whole is that any finding is just a platform to look more in-depth at things” Kraft said. Krahling said he was intrigued by the idea of analyzing water after reports began to build in recent years that various pharmaceutical drugs were showing up in the nation’s water supply. An Associated Press report published in March revealed numerous pharmaceutical compounds in the drinking water supplies of 24 major metropolitan areas including Louisville Ky. which shares the same Ohio River source as Evansville. Included among the drugs found there were antibiotics anticonvulsants mood stabilizers other prescription and over-the-counter medications.
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Exotic Quantum State Of Matter Discovered
Science Daily – Science Daily (press release) – Apr 25, 2008
"The quantum Hall effect has only been seen previously in atomically thin layers of semiconductors in the presence of a very high applied magnetic field. In exploring new realms and subjecting materials to extreme conditions the scientists are seeking to enrich the basis for understanding how electrons move. Robert Cava the Russell Wellman Moore Professor of Chemistry and a co-author on the paper worked with members of his team to produce the crystal in his lab over many months of trial-and-error. "This is one of those wonderful examples in science of an intense extended collaboration between scientists in different fields" said Cava also chair of the Department of Chemistry. "This remarkable experiment is a major home run for the Princeton team" said Phuan Ong a Princeton professor of physics who was not involved in the research. Ong who also serves as assistant director of the Princeton Center for Complex Materials added that the experiment "will spark a worldwide scramble to understand the new states and a major program to manipulate them for new electronic applications. "Electrons which are electrically charged particles behave in a magnetic field as some scientists have put it like a cloud of mosquitoes in a crosswind… "This very direct look opens up a wide range of future possibilities for fundamental research opportunities into the quantum Hall behavior of matter. "Other researchers on the paper include graduate students David Hsieh Andrew Lewis Wray YuQi Xia and postdoctoral fellows Dong Qian and Yew San Hor. The team members are in the departments of physics and chemistry and are members of the Princeton Center for Complex Materials. They used facilities at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory in Berkeley Calif. and the University of Wisconsin’s Synchrotron Radiation Center in Stoughton Wis. This work was supported by U.