How do you make water seemingly vanish? Take a cup, put a superabsorbent polymer in it, pour water into it, and turn the cup upside down. The water doesn’t flow out. It’s like magic. Members of Hillsdale’s chapter of the American Chemical Society visited Gier Elementary School last month for its Family Science...
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Hillsdale ACS competes in ‘Battle of the Chem Clubs’
In the end, it was the titration lab that was their downfall in the Battle of the Chem Clubs. Senior Andrea Lee, a biochemistry major, was the only member of the five-person team that had taken analytical chemistry, and that was over a year ago. “In a titration lab, you’re trying to find the concentration...
Analog on campus: Antiquated technology lives on at Hillsdale
Anyone who has taken one of Professor of History Ken Calvert’s classes knows about his love of the overhead projector. Instead of the digital projectors wired into the ceiling of each classroom, Calvert prefers a boxy contraption illuminated by an incandescent light bulb that looks like it belongs in a “Looney Toons” episode. But Calvert...
Student researches development of ‘child’s moral compass’
It’s not every psychology research project that starts with decorating onesies for the participants, but it’s different when the research subjects are 6 to 24 months old. In preparation for her research project on infant social judgments, senior Mikaela Overton met with her adviser, chairwoman of psychology Kari McArthur, to iron “Baby Scientist” onto the...
Professor helps design efficient diagnostic devices
Professor of Chemistry Mark Nussbaum’s sabbatical at Colorado State University allowed him to hike outdoors in the Rocky Mountains almost every weekend — some of the same types of environments where his research devices may someday be used. Nussbaum performed analytical chemistry research in the area of microfluidics in Charles Henry’s lab, the...




