|  
               
            Web Exclusives: 
              Under the Ivy 
              a column by Jane Martin paw@princeton.edu 
             
            November 
              20, 2002: 
               
              Plus ça change 
              Especially when it 
              comes to Yale and, well, booze 
             Over the course of her first year in office, Shirley Tilghman 
              has had to deal with a handful of serious problems, one involving 
              Yale and at least one involving alcohol. 
              It should bring comfort to know that some things never change. 
              While doing some research on the history of rowing at Princeton, 
              Stuyvesant Pell '53 came across a series of letters written in 1915 
              between Princeton president John G. Hibben and Anson Phelps Stokes, 
              then the secretary of Yale. The two men were friends, and so when 
              Hibben experienced an unpleasant incident involving Yale undergraduates 
              at Princeton, he wrote to Stokes.
              "My dear Mr. Stokes: I am writing to you at this time on 
              a matter which has deeply distressed me," the letter began. 
              Hibben goes on to describe the scene: "The members of the Yale 
              crew after their victory in the afternoon broke training and appeared 
              at a dance which was given at the clubhouse in the evening in a 
              state of very extreme drunkeness [sic]. It happened that Mrs. Hibben 
              and I had gone down to the dance for a few moments, and when the 
              Yale crew came into the room in a very loud and disorderly way I 
              asked the Chairman of the Dance Committee to have them immediately 
              put out, thinking that they were Princeton men." (Understandable, 
              to be sure.)
              The dance chairman declined, explaining that the Yale men were 
              guests and he felt it would not be right to bounce them. Hibben 
              himself, not so fastidious, strode across the room and hauled the 
              worst souse of the lot outside, where he asked a Princeton man to 
              make sure the Bulldog and his teammates were brought back up to 
              campus and put safely to bed. However, the young celebrants persisted 
              and had to be thrown out two more times before peace reigned.
              Stokes, grateful for the information and likely grateful that 
              the news came to him rather than to his boss, Yale President Arthur 
              Hadley, responded with requisite shock. "In my 15 years connection 
              with Yale University I have never before heard of any Yale athletic 
              organization being guilty of intemperance while visiting another 
              college in the middle of the training season," he wrote, adding, 
              "you may count on the most thorough investigation, and on prompt 
              and decisive action." 
              Stokes was as good as his word. He sent a delegation to Princeton 
              by train to speak with, and apologize to, President Hibben, the 
              dance committee chair, and representatives of the Princeton crew. 
              Hibben expressed himself as very satisfied with the outcome of the 
              meeting, writing to Stokes, "you have done everything and more 
              than could be expected of you under the circumstances and I should 
              deplore any public action ... I should not like to have Princeton 
              put in the position of bringing about the public humiliation of 
              these men." One item still nagged, however: Hibben could not 
              understand why Yale's coach had granted the team permission to "break 
              training" and go out drinking.
              An apology from the coach, Guy Nickalls, set the matter right. 
              It was a miscommunication, explained Nickalls; in his native England 
              breaking training simply meant a change in diet and a few days off 
              from practice. "I said to them as I left Princeton, don't take 
              any hard drinks,...but take a bottle of beer if you like with your 
              dinner," Nickalls defended himself.
              Hibben responded graciously, and with the hint of the underlying 
              and eternal problem with alcohol and attitudes toward it, concluding 
              his letter: "I do feel that under the exaltation of a splendid 
              victory such as the Yale crew won it is exceedingly difficult not 
              to be led unwittingly into excesses in the matter of drinking." 
                 
             
             Jane Martin 89 is PAW's former editor-in-chief. You can 
              reach her at paw@princeton.edu 
              
              
              
            
             
               
           |