When Andy Grove got his PhD from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1963,
he was a corporate recruiter's dream candidate. He had a number of job options, perhaps
the best of which was with Bell Labs, then the Mecca of research in solid-state physics.
But Grove made a different choice. Rather than head for Bell Labs, he joined Fairchild Semiconductor,
a West Coast upstart, where he worked under the legendary Gordon Moore, who led the company's research
operation. That was an early example of out-of-the-box thinking ...Find more at Wharton Publishing
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