So I applied to Harvard. My father wrote this wonderful letter to the Dean of Admissions, saying that… explaining my situation: I'd been on my own, I'd been doing this, that and the other thing. And the two of us got in, my best friend and I. We roomed together our freshman year. He went on to become a professor at the Harvard Law School. I see him occasionally. Successful lawyer, professor of the Harvard Law School. And I went to Harvard, and I had absolutely no clue as to what I was going to do, except I knew what I was not going to do. I was not going to become a scientist or anything. I had no interest at all and had no idea of doing anything like that whatsoever.
But Harvard had then created a general education programme for non-science majors because Conant, Jim Conant the chemist, who had a lot to do with the nuclear weapons during the war, had decided that these scientific things that were coming up, such as nuclear weapons and their disposal, were too serious to be left to the scientist, and the public needed general education. Harvard undergraduates who might go on to something or other, should have a scientific education of a minimum kind, so I signed up… well, I looked in the Harvard Confidential Guide to find out the easiest of the Natural Science courses, which was Natural Sciences III, taught by I Bernard Cohen. I Bernard was an historian of science and he had a very flowing voice, very stentorian, flowing voice, and a marvellous handwriting, fantastic handwriting.