50Th Reunion Evokes Memories, Melancholy
Last week I attended my 50th college reunion.
A
pleasant affair, where over 100 of us, now in our 70s and
mellowed beyond having to prove anything, enjoyed the company of
old friends, reminiscing, and catching with each other's past 50
years.
East College, DePauw Univ.
But for all the joy, laughter, and renewed friendships, it was
bittersweet, in both past and future tenses.
In the future, most of us will never again return to that place
which held such special meaning in our lives, never again see
most of the classmates with whom we've shared so much. It was
the end of something important.
Returning to the DU fraternity house where I lived while at
DePauw took me back to the distant past.
The old place hadn't changed much. The dorm smelled the same.
Student rooms - each with 50 new coats of paint since I left -
still warm, inviting, and representing our very first
independence. In the hall was the same corkboard where, long
ago, our house scholastic chairman posted an elaborate
hand-painted poster pronouncing, "There is No Substitute for
Scholastic Exallence [sic]!"
In
some drawer, somewhere is a fading photograph of me standing
tall on the DU lawn dressed in my cap and gown. That Frank of
1957 lived in a time of optimism so full of itself it could see
nothing else.
Frank, 57 graduation photo
Unlike students of today, we graduated debt free. Room, board,
and tuition cost about $1,500 then. Today it's $33,600. Not
including cars, which were not allowed back in the day.
Our mothers, for the most part, had been homemakers. And there
was little doubt we would marry - soon and well and forever -
and that our wives would stay home to raise our children just as
our mothers had raised us.
Although we had vague memories of The Great Depression, by 1957
an expanding prosperity surrounded us. By graduation day, most
of us men had been through several job interviews with large
corporations. Many already had jobs with the likes of General
Electric, IBM, and Procter & Gamble. They promised personal
fulfillment and family security. For life.
Though it's hard to believe today in our dumbed-down,
celebrity-obsessed, and TV-addled culture, in the mid '50s
television was still a novelty to much of the nation, a status
symbol indicated by the fact that there were far more TV roof
antennas than TV sets.
"Leave
it to Beaver" began broadcasting that year. And in our callow
black and white world, all '57 graduates would soon be living in
Mayfield.
Beaver & Friends
The tube had yet to degrade our political process. Most of us
still believed, and believed in our federal government.
In June 1957, in my most bizarre dreams I couldn't conceive that
my future held three marriages, business failures, and,
strangest of all, years of AA meetings. Son of strict Christian
Science teetotalers, in college I seldom drank anything stronger
than root beer.
Always more interested in what life would bring than what I
could take from it, I was not conventionally ambitious and found
little appeal in large daddy-like corporations. I wanted to
change the world. I couldn't do that from a branch office in
Topeka.
Jobs. The draft. Geezers look back.
I took a job at the Elgin Daily Courier-News - newspapers had
always been my love - and soon surprised myself with a
$20-a-week compromise: a switch from the newsroom to advertising
sales. I simply couldn't live on the $55 a week then paid
reporters.
Most of us guys faced the draft after graduation. Many of us,
impatient to make our mark, considered it a waste of time.
Turned out, I wouldn't have missed the experience for the world.
In fact, I'm certain we wouldn't be in our current straits if
the draft existed today.
Graduation
Day, 1957, promised us all a full and prosperous life with no
looking back.
Fifty years later, on a similar warm June Indiana day, I asked
several geezers if their lives had turned out the way they'd
thought. "No," most answered, "but it was a good life." Some
couldn't remember what they'd thought way back when. It wasn't
important.
We Americans, inherently upbeat and optimistic, are not good at
looking back. Perhaps that's why our country keeps making the
same mistakes. But to think that by revisiting the past you
transform the present is a mistake as well.
If nothing else, writing this column disproves it.
As far as my ambition to change the world, we all do that,
whether or not we actually want to. For me, Lily Tomlin was
right on when she said, "I always wanted to be somebody, but I
should have been more specific."
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