An 89-year-old Rhode Island man has achieved a goal he spent two decades working toward and nearly a lifetime thinking about – earning his PhD and becoming a physicist.
Manfred Steiner recently defended his dissertation successfully at Brown University in Providence. Mr Steiner cherishes this degree because it is what he always wanted – and because he overcame health problems that could have derailed his studies.
“But I made it, and this was the most gratifying point in my life, to finish it,” he said on Wednesday at his home in East Providence.
“It was something like a wish that was never fulfilled, that always stuck in the back of my head,” he said. “I always thought, you know, once I’m finished with medicine, I really don’t want to spend my life just sitting around and maybe doing a little golfing or doing something like that. I wanted to keep active.”
At age 70, he started taking undergraduate classes at Brown, one of the Ivy League universities. He was planning to take a few courses that interested him, but by 2007, he accumulated enough credits to enroll in the PhD programme.
As a teenager in Vienna, Mr Steiner was inspired to become a physicist after reading about Albert Einstein and Max Planck. He admired the precision of physics.
But after World War II, his mother and uncle advised him that studying medicine would be a better choice in turbulent times. He earned his medical degree from the University of Vienna in 1955 and moved to the United States just a few weeks later, where he had a successful career studying blood and blood disorders.
Mr Steiner studied haematology at Tufts University and biochemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology before becoming a haematologist at Brown University. He became a full professor and led the haematology section of the medical school at Brown from 1985 to 1994.
Mr Steiner helped establish a research programme in haematology at the University of North Carolina, which he directed until he retired from medicine in 2000 and returned to Rhode Island.
Mr Steiner and his wife, Sheila, who is 93, have been married since 1960. They have two children and six grandchildren. He’ll celebrate his 90th birthday this month.
Mr Steiner now hopes to help with the research of professors he befriended during his studies. “I’m not looking for a paid job. I’m past that,” he said, laughing.