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Chemistry World March 9, 2012 Rebecca Trager |
EPA starts over with its hexavalent chromium review The US Environmental Protection Agency has quietly decided to restart its toxicology review of hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) in drinking water. |
Registered Rep. March 9, 2012 Kristen French |
Due Diligence: SEC Gives 70-Year-Old Broker a Break Back in the late 1970s, at the start of his career, Robert Hardee Quarles got himself into trouble -- offering and selling non-exempt securities without a valid and effective registration statement and also misleading his customers about the nature and risks of those securities. |
Registered Rep. March 2, 2012 |
Due Diligence: Brookstreet CEO Brooks Gets Max. Penalty of $10 Million Five years after blowing up his firm in the mortgage crisis, Stanley Brooks was ordered to pay the maximum penalty of $10 million for fraud charges by a federal judge in Los Angeles. |
Financial Advisor March 2012 Evan Simonoff |
Beyond The 1% Noise How the experience of the U.S. elite and middle class has changed is examined in two new books by Robert Frank and by Charles Murray. |
Financial Advisor March 2012 Bruce W. Fraser |
When Mother Nature Strikes Weather risk management is growing in importance. |
Financial Advisor March 2012 Paul Ellis |
Distinguishing Yourself You can attract clients by offering sustainable investing strategies. Here are some key concepts and marketing approaches. |
Chemistry World March 1, 2012 Samantha Cheung |
Healthier sausages Scientists in Canada have shown that sausages can be made using vegetable oil and a gelling agent instead of animal fat, without altering the texture. |
Chemistry World March 1, 2012 Rebecca Trager |
Leak suggests Dow hired firm to follow Bhopal activists Dow Chemical hired US intelligence companies to monitor the activities of protestors belonging to groups demanding justice for victims of the Bhopal disaster in India, according to emails published by whistleblower website WikiLeaks. |
Chemistry World March 2012 |
Gaining trust for nanotech Our increasing ability to manipulate and create devices at the scale of molecules and cells, and the novel properties which emerge at this level, are talked of as a revolution. But will growing public awareness of nanotech be wary or welcoming? |
IEEE Spectrum March 2012 Jean Kumagai |
Virtual Power Plants, Real Power Five kilowatts here, a hundred kilowatts there -- with a smart grid, it all adds up |
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