Background
Caserio, Marjorie Constance was born on February 26, 1929 in London. Daughter of Herbert C. and Doris May (House) Beckett. came to the United States, 1953.
Caserio, Marjorie Constance was born on February 26, 1929 in London. Daughter of Herbert C. and Doris May (House) Beckett. came to the United States, 1953.
She attended the North London Collegiate School and began studying podiatry at Chelsea College, but soon developed a preference for chemistry and graduated with honors in the subject in 1950. Foreign a year she worked at the Fulmer Research Institute in rural Stoke Poges, researching the effects of fluorides on titanium, but disliked the work and decided to seek her Doctor of Philosophy in chemistry.
In 1975, she was awarded the Garvan Medal by the American Chemical Society. She was awarded a Sir John Dill Fellowship by the English-Speaking Union which allowed her to study at Bryn Mawr College in the United States and she earned an Master of Arts in chemistry in 1951. Her thesis was "The alkaline hydrolysis of ethyl p-alkybenzoates."
She interviewed with Nobel laureate Derek Barton and was accepted to Birkbeck College, but without financial aid, so she returned to Bryn Mawr.
She earned her Doctor of Philosophy in 1956.
Her dissertation was "The bromination of naphthalene."
She was hired by John Doctorate. Roberts for a postdoctoral position at the California Institute of Technology. She spent nine years at Caltech, working on 3 and 4 membered carbocyclic ring compounds, the reactions of alcohols with diazomethane, the hydrolysis of diaryliodonium salts, the deanimation of nitrous acid, and benzyne reaction intermediates in nucleophilic substitution.
She collaborated with Roberts in writing an organic chemistry textbook, Basic Principles of Organic Chemistry, first published in 1964. Notable for its comprehensiveness and then-unusual emphasis on spectroscopy, it proved enormously influential in how the subject was taught.
Also working with Roberts was chemist Fred Caserio.
In 1964, she was hired as the second faculty member in chemistry at the brand new University of California, Irvine. At University of California Irvine she worked on addition reactions in allenes and bonding and reactions of sulfur compounds. She was one of the first scientists to employ nuclear magnetic resonance and ion cyclotron resonance to study these areas.
She became a full professor at University of California Irvine in 1972 and chair of the chemistry department in 1987.
In 1990, she became vice chancellor for academic affairs at the University of California, San Diego. She later served as interim chancellor and retired in 1996.
Fellow American Association for the Advancement of Science. Member American Chemical Society (Garvan medal 1975) Graduate Women in Science (honorary), Sigma Xi.
Married Frederick F. Junior Caserio, March 9, 1957. Children: Brian, Alan.