"Mt. Auburn Street looks pretty much the same," said one returning member of the Class of 1920, "but the College seems mighty different."
Dunster House filled up yesterday with 180 Harvard men, their wives, and 25 widows celebrating their 50th class reunion. Never before has the Class of '20 held a reunion on a grand scale. Although the 25th reunion is normally a gala event, the Class of '20 missed out. Paul McElroy '20, chairman of the reunion, explained, "We got screwed. Mr. Hitler did it."
Yesterday morning, a leisurely registration preceded cocktails and brunch. Charles W. Eliot '20, grandson of Harvard's President Eliot, talked in the afternoon about the physical lay-out of the University. John H. Finley '25 spoke on academic developments at Harvard. Last night the alumni assembled at the Business School's Kresge Hall for cocktails and dinner.
Tours of the College for members of the Class, whose average age is 72, will go on most of today. At 5 p.m., the Puseys will arrive at the Dunster Courtyard for a short, informal reception. Afterwards, alumni will eat dinner at the Science Museum in Boston.
On Wednesday morning, early-rising golfers will dot the manicured and exclusive greens of The Country Club. Those alumni who feel their sleep is more precious will join the golfers later for cocktails and lunch. While the men talk over old times, Harvard women will visit Gore Place in Waltham. Mr. Gore was an early Massachusetts governor whose home is now a showplace of American colonial architecture and styling.
Randall Thompson '20, a lifelong composer well known for the Robert Frost poems he set to music, will serve cocktails Wednesday afternoon at his home. The climax of the reunion will be a class dinner at the Harvard Club, Wednesday night.
No Spiros
The Class of '20 has no members whose names are national household words. Two of the leading academicians in the class, however, are city planner Charles Eliot, who taught at the School of Design, and composer Randall Thompson, who taught in the College's music department. Other men of interest include Gilbert Hood, of Hood Milk, hawkish Congressman Philip J. Philbin (D-Mass.), Sidney Rabb, owner of Stop and Shop, and Franklin Vorenberg, president of Gilchrist's and father of the Harvard Law professor, Hood solicited $400,000 this year for the class gift.
Of the 728 men who graduated with the 1920 class, 420 are alive today. Only 180 of the 420 came to the reunion. The Class of '19, which had fewer living alumni, had 201 men returning to Harvard.
'Battle of Harvard Square'
"We're not getting the number we thought we were going to have," reunion chairman McElroy said. He explained that "some people are afraid they're physically endangered" and cited "the way in which innocent bystanders got hurt in the big battle down in Harvard Square."
The Class of '20 is now living through its fourth American war. During World War I, most men joined a voluntary Harvard regiment the summer before their junior year. Some men enlisted to fight with the Amercian or French armies or went overseas to help the American Red Cross. By the beginning of the junior year, most members of the Class had been sworn into the Army although only a minority had seen active combat. The armistice came in November of their junior year.
Besides the four wars, members of the Class also experienced the full blow of the Great Depression. This was especially painful because the class had a much higher percentage of businessmen that college classes do today.
Support Nixon
Despite the turmoil caused by war, members of the class seem for the most part to support Nixon's policy of Vietnamization and to oppose immediate withdrawal from Southeast Asia.
Although alumni were not favorably impressed with College polities, lectures were a different matter. One alumnus who had sat in on three classes last month said, "I wish we had had lectures like that. They're so much more interesting and stimulating. I wish I could have asked questions and hissed at my professors. But if you sneezed in my day, you would have gotten thrown out."
Another Class of '20 alumnus, Richard Hallowell, said he is an avid Harvard sports fan. He has seen every Harvard-Yale game since 1908. Hallowell said he does not like the way most College students are dressed, with jocks being the exception.
He spoke about a varsity baseball dinner he attended. "Everybody was cleanly and tastefully dressed. There wasn't one undergraduate there that I wouldn't welcome into my home. But I can't say that for very many Harvard undergraduates."
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