John
Have you tried jobs in the Civil Service? There are all sorts of jobs available, including part time, temporary and contract.?
I can¡¯t say that I¡¯d recommend the CS as an employer, subject as it is to the ideological whims of the Tories (and now Demonic Cummings), but it¡¯s possible to find niches to suit the individual as well as the CS. I¡¯m on the point of being a ¡°fee-earner¡± for my old place, from which I retired in a July last year: I help them out with occasional appearances because they¡¯ve not managed yet to find my replacement.?
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
On 15 Feb 2020, at 14:14, John Miller via Groups.Io <johnmiller051118@...> wrote:
?
Well there's not much call for armchair chemists. The only job I can think of is regulatory affairs. That is submitting data on why a drug should be licensed. Have applied for that, has as every man & his dog, because, frankly it is a "peachy role"
John
On Saturday, 15 February 2020, 13:35:07 GMT, Purler <susan.platter@...> wrote:
Dear John,
Maybe not working around hazardous substances, whether legal or not (!), is not such a bad thing? ?Hard, though, if you want to make use of your knowledge and skill. ?Best of luck, whatever you do.
Regards
Susan
Dear Chris & all,
Found the PC way to reset flash drive, Sadly PC at library did not give me administrator privileges. Couldn't seem to access the right pane in disk utility, but will take another look at it Thanks Chris. The realisation has been dawning on me for some time that I'm not going to work in a chemistry lab again. They won't let me drive, so working around hazardous substances just isn't going to happen. May as well try to work round computers.
John