requests which they did not meet. Then they came down to me. The appointment involved a tenured Harvard professorship as well as the directorship of the Deaconess Lab, so I was examined by a medical school committee, too. Frankly, I don't think there was much competition for the job; there were not many who were qualified in medicine and biology, and who wanted to work for a "non-clinical" salary. BERGE: What happened to Shield Warren after you moved to Harvard? KOHN: He wasstill at his post at the Deaconess, but I believe the project wasa great disappointment to him. I now believe that he had hoped for a tight connection to his Institute. But I had madeit clear to him - and everybodyelse - that I hoped to make the lab a medical schoolfacility and to establish a conjoint center for radiation therapy to which it would be attached. Myacceptance involved drawing up anotherset of plans, moving the lab to a central location in the Longwood Avenuearea of the School, and including in it facilities for research controlled by diagnosis, therapy, and nuclear medicine as well as radiobiology. Warren's son-in-law told me subsequently that Warren hated me. I can see why. He had written hundredsofletters to raise the two million plus dollars needed for the lab building, and he had been the primary person responsible for getting an American Cancer Society professorship for the Lab's director. He gave into my plan, I suppose, because he could not face giving back the funds he had raised. I was so naive when I put forward my plan that I did not know how powerful my position was. His plan didn't even fulfill the requirements that he stated in his contract with the Public Health Service (raising moneyfor the building). God knows how many hours Warren spent on that project which yielded him sogf 26 little wo