I'm sure the soon-to-be Dr. Roland will find a suitable position in a little more than a month, aided by the actions of the Japanese in Hawaii.
He had it tough. The Great Depression and a wife and four children. I don't know about the 19 years of schooling. Was he going to finish his PhD in 3 years?
So I did eventually find him. His PhD was in 1975 for heterocyclic chemist Richard C. Anderson. He later worked for Thiokol in Utah. Mitchell is 77 years old today.
looks like Blogger doesn't work with anonymous comments from Chrome browsers at the moment - works in Microsoft Edge, or from Chrome with a Blogger account - sorry! CJ 3/21/20
For some reason, this picture made me think of Groundhog Day. It's a day early, isn't it?
ReplyDeleteI'm sure the soon-to-be Dr. Roland will find a suitable position in a little more than a month, aided by the actions of the Japanese in Hawaii.
ReplyDeleteHe had it tough. The Great Depression and a wife and four children. I don't know about the 19 years of schooling. Was he going to finish his PhD in 3 years?
You sure that doesn't say 1971?
DeleteI think it is a 7, not a 4.
DeleteSorry, my mistake. It is 1971. Verified via Google Books.
DeleteHow the times have - oh, right.
ReplyDeleteIs it normal to finish PhD at 31?
ReplyDeleteProbably not for 1971, but the median age of PhD chemistry graduates in 2015 in the US was 29, so I think 31 would be within one standard deviation.
DeleteInterestingly, Utah State doesn't have any dissertations with Mitchell Roland as an author.
Deletehttps://library.usu.edu/etd/
Well, I've been looking for this guy on Google and on LinkedIn. It sure looks like he never got that chemistry job in the end.
ReplyDeleteSo I did eventually find him. His PhD was in 1975 for heterocyclic chemist Richard C. Anderson. He later worked for Thiokol in Utah. Mitchell is 77 years old today.
ReplyDelete