[Histonet] Retirement
sgoebel <@t> mirnarx.com
sgoebel <@t> mirnarx.com
Mon Jun 20 09:19:14 CDT 2011
The smoking thing is what I missed...I know I work in cancer research
and I shouldn't smoke, but as I tell everyone...by the time I get lung
cancer I will have helped to find the cure (wishful thinking and stupid
excuse making I know.) Now almost everywhere I work you have to
completely leave the property to smoke, and the latest talk is that soon
we won't be able to even smoke on a public sidewalk! I'm sure in my
lifetime I will see cigarettes become illegal and pot become legal,
kinda funny I think =)
Happy Monday all!!
PS-Is anyone else out there going to the Innovex thing in CA this week??
I need a happy hour/go to Alcatraz tour buddy =)
Sarah Goebel-Dysart, BA, HT(ASCP)
Histotechnologist
Mirna Therapeutics
2150 Woodward Street
Suite 100
Austin, Texas 78744
(512)901-0900 ext. 6912
-----Original Message-----
From: histonet-bounces <@t> lists.utsouthwestern.edu
[mailto:histonet-bounces <@t> lists.utsouthwestern.edu] On Behalf Of
histotech <@t> imagesbyhopper.com
Sent: Sunday, June 19, 2011 7:48 PM
To: Paula Sicurello
Cc: histonet <@t> lists.utsouthwestern.edu; Amos Brooks
Subject: Re: [Histonet] Retirement
And remember mouth pipeting? "oops, that's the cotton..."
Eating and smoking in the lab was the norm.
Our alcohol had the tax stamp on it! :o)
Michelle
On Jun 19, 2011, at 4:19 PM, Paula Sicurello <patpxs <@t> gmail.com> wrote:
> Sheesh! We used to have people smoke while working with propylene
oxide.
>
> Eating in your control pigs was part of the benefit of being a
> graduate student to save on grocery money.
>
> Film? My TEM used glass plates.
>
> Lab mates used to routinely drink diet coke and 100% ethanol on
Fridays.
>
> Wearing closed toed shoes was for wimps, you were just fast if you
> dropped a steel wedge blade.
>
> We even wrote using the entire word and proper grammar, none of this
> acronym stuff for us.
>
> Retirement? What's that?
>
> Paula :-)
>
> On Sun, Jun 19, 2011 at 12:31 PM, Amos Brooks <amosbrooks <@t> gmail.com>
wrote:
>> Agarose Gels!
>> ... Listen you whipersnapper Agarose is the easy way out. When I
learned
>> it we used to have to make up our own polyacrylamide gels. That was
after
>> having to walk to work up hill both ways in 30 feet of snow!
>>
>> (No nearer retirement)
>> Crotchety Amos
>>
>>
>>
>> Message: 7
>> Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2011 13:24:12 -0400
>> From: Emily Sours <talulahgosh <@t> gmail.com>
>> Subject: Re: [Histonet] Retirement
>> To: histonet <@t> lists.utsouthwestern.edu
>> Message-ID: <BANLkTineJxtXYoP-byfweuxn3yw-ff3Qsg <@t> mail.gmail.com>
>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
>>
>> Retirement? I think by the time I get to that point, social security
will
>> have run out.
>> Then again, technology will be so advanced, I can tell stories about
the old
>> days, where I logged on to the bbs by modem to post messages to my
friends
>> and typed in my own html coding.
>> We didn't have google when I was young!! Our cameras used film! And
you
>> couldn't see how bad your pictures were until you developed that
film!!
>> There was no PCR to sequence your DNA, you ran an agarose gel and
hoped for
>> the best!! You could drink the 100% ethanol, there was no denaturing!
(okay
>> that was before my time) You could smoke in the lab while you
sectioned
>> without gloves!! (okay that was too)
>>
>> Emily
>>
>> A great book should leave you with many experiences, and slightly
exhausted.
>> You should live several lives while reading it.
>> -William Styron
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>
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