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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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the goRtons And sLAdes 21<br />

says. “<strong>The</strong>n in 1952 when I was just about ready to leave home, my father<br />

<strong>and</strong> I had a passionate disagreement. He was for MacArthur. I was for<br />

Eisenhower.”<br />

A soLid student, Slade was conflicted about<br />

college but ended up at one <strong>of</strong> the best. “I<br />

wasn’t going to go to Louisiana <strong>State</strong> where<br />

my mother went. My father had not gone to<br />

college at all, but we kids were damn well<br />

going to go. I went to Dartmouth because my<br />

older cousin was sent there for his Navy<br />

training. He became an <strong>of</strong>ficer <strong>and</strong> said it<br />

was a great place. I was admitted to a couple<br />

<strong>of</strong> smaller schools, but Dartmouth was certainly<br />

the only Ivy League School that I applied<br />

to <strong>and</strong> an easy choice when I was<br />

accepted.”<br />

He started college right after high school<br />

Slade at Dartmouth College,<br />

1950.<br />

graduation in 1945 <strong>and</strong> finished his freshman year in January. Even though<br />

the war was over, the draft was still active <strong>and</strong> college deferments had<br />

ended. Slade was drafted in April <strong>of</strong> 1946. After basic training, Private Gorton<br />

was sent to the Army’s Weather Observer School learning to tell cumulonimbus<br />

from nimbostratus. <strong>The</strong>n the demobilizing military decided to<br />

discharge draftees early. Gorton served 11 months <strong>and</strong> five days, which was<br />

fortuitous in two respects: <strong>The</strong> G.I. Bill paid most <strong>of</strong> the rest <strong>of</strong> his last<br />

three years at Dartmouth “<strong>and</strong> when Korea came along if you hadn’t<br />

served a year it didn’t count.”<br />

“I liked college,” Slade says, “<strong>and</strong> I did well—Phi Beta Kappa—but I<br />

didn’t have any idea what I was going to do next. In fact, I made one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

dumbest decisions I’ve ever made.”

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