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History of the Forest Products Laboratory

Interview #935: Soltis, Lawrence A. (June, 2009)

View all of First Interview Session (June 20, 2008)

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00:00:00 - 00:03:05 Introduction

introduction, early years, education, background, student, engineering, preparation, University of Wisconsin, University of Minnesota, career

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00:00:00

AP

Good morning today is Friday June 20th, 2008. My name is Allison Page, I'm with the UW-Madison Oral History Program. This morning I will be interviewing Larry Soltis with the U.S. Forest Products Lab. Mr. Soltis if you could just start by maybe stating your name, provide maybe a spelling, and then kind of talk a little bit about where you were born, when, and some of your early education?

LS

Okay, my name is Lawrence Soltis, S-O-L-T-I-S. I'm originally from Milwaukee. I went to the University of Wisconsin, graduated with a degree in engineering in 1963. And then in 1964 I got a master's degree from the University of Wisconsin and as part of my master's program I worked at the Forest Products Lab as a student, engineering I guess I was classified as. After that I worked as a consulting engineer for quite a few years and then I went out for a PhD at the University of Minnesota. Then I worked for the University of Wisconsin for about ten years and then starting about 1980 I went back to the Forest Products Lab to start working there.

AP

So did you receive your undergraduate degree at UW-Madison?

LS

That's correct.

AP

Okay. How did you decide on the career path that you chose? Was that something you had an early interest in, or did that just kind of develop gradually?

LS

Oh no I had an early interest in it. I saw construction going on when I was, used to walk to school and I thought I'll be part of that so that's how I went into engineering. [pause]

AP

Was there anything in your childhood that kind of prepared you for work at the Forest Products Lab?

LS

Not really, no it just---when I got my master's degree we had to write a thesis and the professor was Professor [Krandall?] at the time, at the University of Wisconsin. He had, he knew people out at Forest Products Lab and he says they have a program where you can do your experimental work at the lab and do your theoretical work at the University, and you end up with a thesis at the end of it. So it sounded like a good deal to me so I did it.

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