The News Review:
- High marks in chemistry
- Insider: Chemistry trade talks don’t mix
- Frank R. Milio
- The Right Chemistry
- Trust: The main ingredient in Cavs’ winning chemistry
- Joe DeSimone – 2008 Tar Heel of the Year
- Bucks group takes gamble on new life-sciences center
High marks in chemistry
Boston Globe United States
He’s a locker-room linchpin. A football locker room is a fascinating place bringing players together at different points in their careers from different backgrounds with varied salaries and personal agendas in a testosterone-filled environment. If only it were so easy to order up good locker-room chemistry it would be one of the first items on a coach’s to-do list each year because a bad mix can quickly sink a season. Usually that chemistry must evolve over time. With Pennington however the culture of the Dolphins’ room changed almost immediately. “We got lucky” first-year coach Tony Sparano acknowledged. Lucky because the Dolphins’ initial rebuilding plans never included Pennington who entered Jets training camp locked in a battle for the starting job.
Insider: Chemistry trade talks don’t mix
The Plain Dealer – cleveland.com H
That is sure to continue over the next two months especially with some valuable expiring contracts as assets most notably Wally Szczerbiak. But Cavs coach Mike Brown said Thursday the team isn’t even thinking about making a move right now because of the on-and-off court chemistry they’ve developed. He said making any sort of trade now would involve a lot of risk. “Any time you have a team that is playing well whether you have chemistry and whether you don’t it’s is risky to break it up” Brown said. “We do have pretty good chemistry. And we have pretty good chemistry.
Frank R. Milio
Baltimore Sun United States
Milio The Towson University teacher wrote scientific articles and successfully fought to protect the school’s chemistry program. By Jacques Kelly December 28 2008 Frank R.
The Right Chemistry
The Gazette (Montreal) Canada
inc–> The Right ChemistryA light holiday quiz about gasJE SCHWARCZ The GazettePublished: 11 hours agoThis quiz is a gas!What gas can be used to keep packaged meat looking bright red?Carbon monoxide. The browning of meat occurs when myoglobin the oxygen storage compound in muscle tissue reacts with oxygen in the air to form metmyoglobin. This reaction can be prevented by spiking packaged meat with carbon monoxide a gas that reacts with myoglobin to form stable bright red carboxymyoglobin. Such “modified atmosphere packaging” can keep meat looking red for weeks. pponents of this technology claim that the practice deceives consumers into believing that their meat is fresh even beyond the point where spoilage has set in. The meat industry maintains that modified atmosphere packaging actually prevents bacterial growth by excluding oxygen and that the technology saves consumers money.
Trust: The main ingredient in Cavs’ winning chemistry
The Plain Dealer – cleveland.com H
It’s what most fans consider chemistry. It’swhen a basketball team suddenly begins to play unselfishlywhen they help each other on defense and don’t seem toworry about who is scoring on offense. It happened a year ago when Boston made monster tradesadding Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen to Paul Pierce and abunch of young role players. Would three veteran scorers whonever won a title play together? Would Allen and Pierce –never very interested in defense — suddenly defend?.
Joe DeSimone – 2008 Tar Heel of the Year
News & bserver NC
comp –> Joseph M. DeSimone PRNUNCED: Dee-sa-MANBRN: May 16 1964 in Norristown Pa. FAMILY: Wife Suzanne; son Philip 19; daughter Emily 16EDUCATIN: Bachelor of science in chemistry Ursinus College May 1986; Ph. in chemistry Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University May 1990CCUPATIN: Chancellor’s Eminent Professor of Chemistry at UNC-Chapel Hill; William R. Distinguished Professor of Chemical Engineering N.
Bucks group takes gamble on new life-sciences center
Philadelphia Inquirer PA
28 2008 Bucks group takes gamble on new life-sciences center By Diane Mastrull Inquirer Staff Writer It doesn’t take a chemistry degree to understand that Robert Loughery and his three partners are working with a scary concoction. They are looking for tenants for their new commercial development – a life-sciences business center in Bristol Township Bucks County – when demand for laboratories and other research-and-development space is on the decline and vacancies are on the rise. "We do recognize the slowdown and the challenges of next year" said Loughery a managing member of Doylestown-based Keystone Redevelopment Group L.
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