Indians’ Wood fondly remembers Cubs
The News Review:
- Indians’ Wood fondly remembers Cubs
- Magic want chemistry right for Nelson’s return
- Green chemistry firm is first Bioeconomy Institute tenant in Holland
- Land of the Lost: Ferrell/McBride chemistry makes it worth it
- Unexplained atmospheric chemistry detected
Indians’ Wood fondly remembers Cubs
ESPN
I don’t think I fit in the equation for this year’s team. So it is what it is — that’s baseball. I talked to Mark DeRosa a couple of days ago and he mentioned that the Cubs may be struggling this year because the chemistry is so much different on this year’s team especially without veterans like you him and [pitcher] Jason Marquis. You’re obviously not in the clubhouse but do you think that’s a big deal? KW: You know what? Chemistry — it’s like the chicken or the egg? Which one comes first — winning or chemistry? I think you have chemistry when you start winning. Some people say you don’t win until you have chemistry so I don’t think we’ll ever know the answer to that. But we’ve got a good group of guys here [in Cleveland] we had a great group last year [in Chicago] — I had a great time. I’m here in Cleveland we’ve got our own set of problems we’re worrying about.
Magic want chemistry right for Nelson’s return
AFP
Howard said even though Jameer Nelson has a calming effect on his teammates the Magic must be careful not to rush the all-star guard or anyone for that matter if they haven’t been practising and playing with the team on a daily basis. “He’s rusty” Howard said after Wednesday’s rlando practice to get ready for game one of the NBA finals against the Los Angeles Lakers. “He hasn’t had a lot of experience in playing. But the one thing he brings to our team is that he is fearless.
Green chemistry firm is first Bioeconomy Institute tenant in Holland
MSU Today
laboratoryClick on an image to view a larger or high-resolution version. — A Michigan State University technology spinoff company is the first tenant in MSU’s new Bioeconomy Institute located in a former Pfizer Inc. laboratory in Holland Mich. Biochemistry professor Rawle Hollingsworth has operated his company AFID Therapeutics Inc. in laboratory space at MBI International in Lansing since 2004 developing technology licensed from MSU. It now will tap western Michigan talent and resources to expand development work.
Land of the Lost: Ferrell/McBride chemistry makes it worth it
Blast
Whether it’s remnants of their work together on HB?s ?Eastbound and Down? or the fact that Danny McBride can?t open his mouth without cursing the twosome brought an edge to a film that otherwise could have easily passed under the box office radar. Though the 1974 TV show and its 1991 remake are both marketed as children’s shows this remake is marketed more as a parody than an adaptation. The bottom line: Don?t bring your kids to this film unless you want them to walk our grabbing each other?s breasts to say hello dropping the F-bomb and wanting to get intoxicated off alcoholic fruit. ?Land of the Lost? more than anything else is a kid?s movie made for adults.
Related from Harrypotterstore: ‘Watchmen’ Director’s Cut To Hit Theaters In July Zack Snyder …
Unexplained atmospheric chemistry detected
Science News
The team?s next step says Rohrer will include testing samples of air from the region in the lab to see if light-stimulated reactions produce similarly anomalous amounts of hydroxyl radicals. Results of the new research ?are interesting? says Jeff Gaffney an atmospheric chemist at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. ?I?m not surprised that models [of atmospheric chemistry] are unable to accurately estimate hydroxyl levels when there are a lot of volatile organic chemicals in the air? he notes. Another possible complication to getting accurate field data he adds is that some of the atmosphere?s volatile substances are so reactive that they disappear before equipment can measure them. With new advances in equipment scientists are just now able to make some types of atmospheric measurements in heavily polluted air says Allen L. Robinson an environmental engineer at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. f the team?s study site in the Pearl River delta he notes: ?There?s obviously some interesting chemistry going on there.
Written by admin on June 6th, 2009 with
no comments.
Read more articles on News.