Author Topic: How Dangerous Can Labs Be?  (Read 3097 times)

I went down to the school's lab to see how it is because I'm going to be doing things in the lab tomorrow. I was happy until I came across this.


Translated:
In Memoriam of
Juan Pablo Cáceres (Z''L)
January 23rd 1991 - Janurary 23rd 2008
Bro, you've left a hole in our hearts. Always with you, your friends and teachers of Chemistry.

How dangerous can a laboratory actually be?
$50 that Charles will post something here.
EDIT: Fixed the image.
« Last Edit: March 11, 2014, 02:26:12 PM by Pie Crust »

Only as dangerous as the people in it.

why did they call him Bro

why did they call him Bro
It would be the argentine version of "dude" or "man".

Quote
''The teacher inside beckoned her with a mean grin. ''There's room for one more,'' he said.
''I've-I've got the wrong room!'' said the girl, and she hurried away.
She was thrown to the side. The chemistry lab had exploded. Everyone in it was dead.''

Your country has more meth labs than actual labs

well that probably has nothing to do with the lab itself. maybe it was just his favorite place in the school so that's where they decided to put the little memorial
or one of his favorite teachers was the chemistry teacher

schools don't actually do anything dangerous enough to kill anyone

I'm 100% sure that meth isn't made here.

well that probably has nothing to do with the lab itself. maybe it was just his favorite place in the school so that's where they decided to put the little memorial
or one of his favorite teachers was the chemistry teacher

schools don't actually do anything dangerous enough to kill anyone
The guy was 17 years old.
Last year a teacher showed us how a radiowave meeter worked. He had a small jar with reenriched uranium.

"Aca tenemos un frasco de uranio enriquecido y como pueden ver, el aparato esta haciendo ruidos a lo loco"
« Last Edit: March 11, 2014, 02:30:12 PM by Pie Crust »

It can be bad, depending on what type of lab it is.

why did they call him Bro
In Hispanic languages it's just a way to identify, not like saying monday or Bro in the American language

It would be the argentine version of "dude" or "man".
Beat me to it + said it better
>:c

Labs are only as dangerous as the people in it. If you're working on a nuclear warhead, it's only dangerous when you let a Self Delete bomber test the fuse
(Pardon the stuffty metaphor)

If you're working on a nuclear warhead, it's only dangerous when you let a Self Delete bomber test the fuse
(Pardon the stuffty metaphor)
very stuffty cus there are plenty of other ways that would be dangerous

RIP

Tested sodium combinations in his mouth.

I have a feeling he was a TA or a very active student that was very involved and just died of other causes

The guy was 17 years old.
Last year a teacher showed us how a radiowave meeter worked. He had a small jar with reenriched uranium.
thanks 4 the fun facts but pls explain to me how this is relevant

thanks 4 the fun facts but pls explain to me how this is relevant
schools don't actually do anything dangerous enough to kill anyone
The teacher also said something about using sulfuric acid.
As soon as we start doing dangerous stuff, I'll take pictures with my phone.
« Last Edit: March 11, 2014, 02:40:42 PM by Pie Crust »