[hr][hr][center][h1][b][i][color=99ccff]Edwina Fairfax[/color][/i][/b][/h1][img]https://static.tumblr.com/1d06048a6d83aef1996db210963232e0/swhg1py/TAQmrm3n3/tumblr_static_rltyomq.gif[/img][hr][hr][@Gilgex][/center][hr] [color=99ccff]"Yeah, my P.I.'s told me all about that aspect of Dr. Cooper's work,"[/color] Edwina said with a bit of a grimace. [color=99ccff]"Dr. Cooper doesn't exactly have the best reputation in the scientific community ever since...Well, you know, his later round of theories,"[/color] Edwina explained. Not very many physicists took kindly to the idea that a dark matter meteorite was the cause for all of the individuals with gifts. It seemed a bit too mythical and magical to them - too convenient, especially given that dark matter couldn't be detected by anything on the electromagnetic spectrum. It was one of the reasons why Edwina was so interested in it - unlike optics, it was a field of physics that evaded her gifts. [color=99ccff]"But it doesn't matter whose ego says what - if the data suggests that happened, then that's that,"[/color] Edwina then said, summarizing her own thoughts on the matter. She couldn't help but chuckle slightly at the mention of Vido. He was one of the best undergrad researchers in her lab and to hear that he was almost getting kicked out of a humanities course wasn't a huge shock. [color=99ccff]"I'm not surprised. Most physics majors go through a phase like that - when anything that isn't physics or math isn't worth their time,"[/color] Edwina said. [color=99ccff]"Why so interested in the gifted, by the way? One researcher to another."[/color]