From left,
Roger Bates ’67, Llewellyn Ross ’58, Richard McGlynn
’60, Duncan Dempster ’59, and Donald Le Win ’61
at the Nassoons mini-reunion in Bermuda in March. (Courtesy
Richard McGlynn ’60)
ALUMNI
CONNECTIONS: Gathering
through song
NASSOONS MINI-REUNIONS: One group of
alumni is still forging new Princeton connections the same way its
members did as undergraduates — through song. Although the
Nassoons, Princeton’s oldest singing group, had been celebrating
major anniversaries of its 1941 founding by gathering for a weekend
of music and fellowship in Princeton every five years, that wasn’t
enough for James W. Crawford Jr. ’61 and David R. Watts ’62.
At the singing group’s 55th anniversary in 1996, they lamented
the long intervals between get-togethers and proposed a mini-reunion
for Nassoons who graduated between the mid-1950s and early 1960s.
Despite the chilly venue — Chicago in late January 1997
— about 20 Nassoons traveled from as far as Hawaii to lend
their voices to the first mini-reunion. Since then the Nassoons
have met yearly in locations as varied as Aspen, Colo.; Charleston,
S.C.; Longboat Key, Fla.; and Palm Desert, Calif.
At their latest shindig on March 31, 2005, 21 Nassoons met for
their most ambitious mini to date: a long weekend at the Pink Beach
Club in Bermuda, where some men in the group had sung 50 years ago
as undergraduates. Organized by Rich McGlynn ’60 and his travel-agent
wife, Vicky, the mini featured morning rehearsals, followed by shopping,
sightseeing, and golf in the afternoons, and nightly performances.
Despite a busy social schedule and several late nights, by Sunday
evening, the “singing [had] only improved,” says Roger
Bates ’67, in preparation for the group’s 65th reunion
next year.
The success of the mini-reunions, which Dick Grieves ’60
says “have established amazingly deep friendships that include
wives and friends who look forward to these gatherings as much as
the Nassoons,” has inspired a younger group of Nassoons, from
the mid-1960s through early-1970s classes, to gather yearly at different
venues. If Rich McGlynn’s enthusiasm is any indicator, Nassoons
minis will be around for a long time. “There’s something
almost miraculous in seeing men in their 60s and early 70s standing
in a circle singing songs they learned when they were in their late
teens,” he says. “In each face, I can still see the
boys we were back then. As so many of us now realize, being part
of the Nassoons was our life at Princeton.”