![]() |
Credit: Twistedlilkitty |
Friday, August 17, 2012
Gosh, this is so true.
Labels:
fun
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1. HELPING CHEMISTS FIND JOBS IN A TOUGH MARKET. 2. TOWARDS A QUANTITATIVE UNDERSTANDING OF THE QUALITY OF THE CHEMISTRY JOB MARKET.
![]() |
Credit: Twistedlilkitty |
What's the job market like for chemists? Dude -- it's always bad.*
How bad is it? How the heck should I know? Quantifying the chemistry job market is what this blog is about. That, and helping chemists find jobs.
E-mail chemjobber with helpful tips, career questions or angry comments at chemjobber -at- gmail dotcom. All correspondence is kept confidential. (Didn't get an e-mail back? It's okay to try again.) Please address correspondence to "Chemjobber" or "CJ." Greetings of "Hi" are undesired. Emails from faculty members are answered faster than those from departmental admins or HR staff.
Voicemail/SMS: (302) 313-6257
Twitter: @chemjobber
RSS feed here
(The Blogger spam filter gets hungry sometimes, and likes to eat comments. You can e-mail me, and sometimes I can get it to cough up your comment. I am always happy to try.)
(*For the literal-minded, this is a joke. Mostly.)
CJ, I expect that you, as a profressional chemist, would not have used such a coarse expletive ;)
ReplyDeleteAs a Brit , I have to concur. Bollocks is my expletive of choice. Closely followed, of course, by Bloody Hell! I once had a 100L reactor boil almost dry on me overnight. Not a pretty sight! Surprisingly, after work-up, everything was OK!
ReplyDeleteIn British English, does "exclamation" really have that other "i"?
ReplyDeleteNo, it does not. Good catch!
ReplyDeleteThat's why Twistedlilkitty went into science, not English literature!
ReplyDelete