Difference between revisions of "Interview Dusoulier (2000) Rayward/CNRS"
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:Just before my accident, I had found a job at the Laboratoire de la Grange, a pharmaceutical laboratory for the control of drugs. Today, I don’t think the subject is that interesting, but, at the time, I was happy there. Then came the accident, which was just terrible. | :Just before my accident, I had found a job at the Laboratoire de la Grange, a pharmaceutical laboratory for the control of drugs. Today, I don’t think the subject is that interesting, but, at the time, I was happy there. Then came the accident, which was just terrible. | ||
:My husband and I were in the car with our three children. | :My husband and I were in the car with our three children. | ||
− | ;{{Smallcaps|Rayward}}: | + | ;{{Smallcaps|Rayward}}: Were they hurt as well? |
− | ;{{Smallcaps|Dusoulier}}: | + | ;{{Smallcaps|Dusoulier}}: Not really. My husband was hurt; he was pinned in. I was thrown out of the car. |
+ | :I decided to put an advertisement in Le Monde stating, “Doctor of pharmacy with these diplômes, knowing French, English, German, Russian, and Spanish, would like to find a job that doesn’t require standing.” | ||
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==Employment at Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique== | ==Employment at Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique== | ||
{{Article body/Begin}} | {{Article body/Begin}} | ||
+ | ;{{Smallcaps|Dusoulier}}: | ||
+ | ;{{Smallcaps|Rayward}}: | ||
+ | ;{{Smallcaps|Dusoulier}}: | ||
{{Article body/End}} | {{Article body/End}} | ||
[[fr:Interview Dusoulier (2000) Rayward/CNRS]] | [[fr:Interview Dusoulier (2000) Rayward/CNRS]] |
Revision as of 11:10, 13 April 2021
Contents
Education and Early Career
- Rayward
- Please tell me about your family background and your education.
- Dusoulier
- I was born in Nice, France, to Russian parents. I attended school in Nice.
Educational path
- I studied pharmacology in Marseilles and earned my Ph.D. in pharmacology in Paris. While in Paris, I also studied other related subjects such as biology, serology, and virology at Institut Pasteur.
- I decided to study business administration because of my husband. He has a Ph.D. in political science and a diploma in engineering. I received a diploma in business administration when it began in France—during the first year, but I was not very good because law did not interest me much. I was selected because there were not many scientists studying that. There was only one pharmacologist and one veterinarian.
- Rayward
- Were you the only woman in the program?
- Dusoulier
- No, there were other women.
- Rayward
- When was this?
- Dusoulier
- Around 1960.
- I studied supplementary diplômes (diplomas) in the pharmaceutical industry in order to work in industry; I didn’t want to work in a pharmacy.
Car Accident
- At the end of 1960, I was in a car accident, and stayed in bed for about a year. After that, the doctor said that I could not work standing up for at least three or four years, so I had to find a new job. I had been working in pharmacy doing biological analysis. I didn’t even know what other jobs I was qualified for that wouldn’t require standing.
- Just before my accident, I had found a job at the Laboratoire de la Grange, a pharmaceutical laboratory for the control of drugs. Today, I don’t think the subject is that interesting, but, at the time, I was happy there. Then came the accident, which was just terrible.
- My husband and I were in the car with our three children.
- Rayward
- Were they hurt as well?
- Dusoulier
- Not really. My husband was hurt; he was pinned in. I was thrown out of the car.
- I decided to put an advertisement in Le Monde stating, “Doctor of pharmacy with these diplômes, knowing French, English, German, Russian, and Spanish, would like to find a job that doesn’t require standing.”
Employment at Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
- Dusoulier
- Rayward
- Dusoulier