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Daniel Elliot Stuntz : ウィキペディア英語版 | Daniel Elliot Stuntz
Daniel Elliot Stuntz (March 15, 1909 - March 5, 1983) was often called "Bud" by his family and colleagues. When Stuntz was young, his immediate and extended family moved from Ohio to Seattle. He had a sister named Alice Stuntz Marionneaux, whom he frequently visited in the later years. Stuntz's father, Chauncey Richards Stuntz, who worked in the sugarcane business, would be absent to work for most of the time. In 1920s, he was promoted as the general manager of a sugar mill, 'Jobabo' in Oriente Province in Cuba. During his father's absence, Stuntz' mother, Evelyn Elliot Stuntz, managed the family and arranged the children's summer vacations. ==Education== Stuntz was born in Milford, Ohio, United States. Before he went to college, he studied in Queen Anne High School. In autumn 1931, he enrolled at the University of Washington and received his Bachelor of Science degree in 1935. Stuntz began his undergraduate study as a forestry major. After taking a general mycology course offered by Dr. J. W. Hotson in the Botany Department, he developed an interest in fungi. Hence, he decided to change his major to Botany. After he finished his bachelor's degree study, he began his master's degree with Dr. Hotson while working on ''Inocybe''. (Stuntz and Hotson 1938) He did not finish his master's degree; instead, he went to Yale for his doctoral degree. His transfer was encouraged by Professor T. C. Frye, who viewed Stuntz as a potential replacement of Dr. Hotson, whose health was becoming problematic. Amazingly, Dr. John S. Boyce accepted Stuntz as a student and allowed him continue to do ''Inocybe'' research, which is not Dr. Boyce's expertise. Stunz finished his doctoral degree at Yale in 1940.
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