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            Web Exclusives:  
              Under the Ivy 
               a column by Jane Martin paw@princeton.edu  
             
            July 19, 2006: 
            The 
              heartbeat of PAW  
              Year after year, Class 
              Notes are the thread that binds alumni together  
              By Jane Chapman Martin ’89 
              Former PAW editor Jim Merritt ’66 dedicated 
              his book The Best of PAW to PAW’s class secretaries, 
              whose columns, he wrote, “are the soul of PAW.”
              No one who has worked at the magazine could argue 
              with that. Indeed, I’d even say Class Notes are the heartbeat 
              of the magazine, the pump that keeps it going. When I first began 
              editing PAW, I asked myself the question, How do you engage 75,000 
              readers who have nothing in common other than a sliver of time spent 
              on a campus – in different decades across a century? The answer, 
              though I’m not sure I ever realized it at the time, is Class 
              Notes. They’re why people read PAW back to front. They’re 
              looking for that thread of familiarity, that name they know, that 
              recognition of a moment of shared life history. Class Notes are 
              the ultimate embodiment of what first editor Jesse Lynch Williams 
              1892 described as PAW’s mission: to serve as a kind of “long-distance 
              telephone” line among alumni and the University.
              Class secretaries will doubtless be surprised to 
              read these words coming from my keyboard. Epic battles raged behind 
              the scenes at PAW during my first year on the job, with, apparently, 
              fully three-quarters of the secretaries convinced that I meant to 
              do away with notes altogether, or at least curtail them into meaninglessness. 
              Heartless was perhaps the kindest of epithets thrown my way.
              It comforted me somewhat, then, recently to come 
              across a Class Notes column from 1936. Among the jokes about the 
              New Deal and bon mots at classmates’ expense (“XXXX, 
              famed in intelligently shooting off his mouth, has been made a canon”) 
              lies an entertaining, caustic reaction to a secretaries’ guidebook 
              compiled by the Alumni Council of the day. Secretary Rudolph Zinsser 
              ’10 wrote that the handbook “tells all class secretaries 
              the many things they should do and all the things that they have 
              left undone.” “They list 21 duties of the class secretary 
              so that we are cheered to learn that we have only 19 more to perform,” 
              he added.
              Among the pieces of advice handed down: The class 
              secretary “should prevent any individual in the class, no 
              matter how willing, from becoming overloaded with Class and Princeton 
              work.” Zinsser noted that this admonition carefully excluded 
              the secretary himself, and pointed out that the additional suggestion 
              to ask the chairman of the class for help also missed its mark. 
              “Since in our class the secretary is also the chairman of 
              the council, don’t be surprised if you find your chairman 
              talking to himself,” he wrote.
              The guidebook recommended that “at least one 
              mention of every classmate every year should be the goal of every 
              secretary,” but conceded that “this is practically impossible 
              of achievement. “Not at all,” fired back Zinsser. “If 
              no class secretary before has ever before achieved it, we will. 
              From now on our notes will read like this: ‘Spring is almost 
              here, Atkinson. Business is better, Baldwin. Don’t forget 
              to vote this fall, Carpenter’ – and so on through the 
              alphabet.”
              Zinsser wound up his column with a poke at another 
              piece of wisdom: “Sometimes when all other methods of eliciting 
              news from a non-corresponding classmate have failed, a letter to 
              his wife will do the trick.” “Oh, well, now there’s 
              a real idea! Hold on to your hats, girls!” scoffed Zinsser.
              It’s a relief to know some truths, indeed, 
              never change. Now if you’ll excuse me, I need to drop a news-laden 
              line to my class secretary.    
             Jane Chapman Martin ’89 is PAW’s former 
              editor-in-chief. After four years of writing Under the Ivy, she 
              has decided to give up the column and take on other ventures. 
             
             
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