C AY.
you?
It's difficult,
uCWhat else can I tell
I never thought of making a summary gein
eva@iyating of my career.
I've enjoyed my career very very much,
f
and I feel that I've been ajgpgquite lucky in the way that it has
gone.
I somehow or other always managed tc have a good job, and
that's very important I might add.
To be quite interested in what
G
‘
f
f
I was doing.
doing this,
I've never had a period “which I've said why am I
this is awful work,
from doing what I want.
could
these seople are preventing me
I've had some constraints but nothing I
dream of complaining about.
é
here very
j
Well. [tape interrupted]
I never knew the people over
What was I saying?
“tdi )
BERGE:
You didn't know the people over herevery well.
KOHN:
Oh yes,
more of Tobias.
mine,
BERGE:
right.
Kat ont
baw
I hd met Lawrence.
Well ,t VeewresA
But his interests in a way were different than
I think, because he was trained as a physicist.
Can you explain a little bit about the difference in
perspectives from a physicist or a radiation physicist anda
radiation biologist's point of view?
KOHN:
I'm not sure that I would want to generalize too much,
but I think the physicist would tend to think in terms @fbesdtiies
ae
ase
es
of his knowledge of atoms,
21
neutrons, protons,
so