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Save That Dye!

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

Michael Titford*
Affiliation:
University of South Alabama

Extract

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All laboratory workers face the ongoing requirement that all chemicals and solutions used in the lab be labeled with the date of receipt or preparation, together with the expiration date of the chemical and the initials of the preparer, as well as any known hazards associated with that chemical. Officials from accrediting agencies, sometimes unannounced, pick and poke around laboratories looking for outdated chemicals and solutions, including biological stains left unsuspectingly at the back of a fridge or on a seldom used shelf.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Microscopy Society of America 2002

References

1) Beer, J. J. 1959. The Emergence of the German Dye Industry. University of Illinois Press Google Scholar
2) Lillie, R.D. 1977. H.J. Conn's Biological Sains. Williams and Wilkins, Baltimore Google Scholar
3) Mallory, F.B. and Wright, J.H. 1901. Pathological Technique. WB Saunders. New York.Google Scholar
4) Titford, M. 2001. Comparison of historic Grübler dyes with modern counterparts. Biotech & Histochem. 76:2330.Google Scholar