Posts Tagged ‘Princeton University’

Happy 101st Birthday

I was thinking about Nicholas Katzenbach today, Jan. 17, on what would have been his 101st birthday and was pleased to read a letter to the editor from Friday advocating for two new statues on Princeton’s campus – John Doar and Nicholas Katzenbach. Kevin R. Loughlin wrote his letter in response to a George Will op-ed about Princeton University’s current discussions on campus to remove the statue of John Witherspoon, a signer of the Declaration of Independence. I think Loughlin’s idea to erect statues to John Doar and Nicholas Katzenbach at Princeton University, their alma mater, would be a great addition to the campus. Scroll down to read the letter to the editor and George Will’s column. Happy Birthday, Nick. Maybe there is a statue in your future.

Opinion Princeton should add statues of civil rights pioneers
January 13, 2023 at 4:02 p.m. EST


In his Jan. 8 op-ed, “Wokeness comes for a statue,” George F. Will questioned the wisdom of a demand, by some, to remove the statue of John Witherspoon, one of Princeton University’s early presidents, from campus because of his enslavement of two people. Like Mr. Will, I am a Princeton graduate and consider it myopic to judge too harshly the actions of individuals through a historical lens of several hundred years. I think it would be far more instructive to erect two new statues of more recent Princeton graduates to acknowledge their contributions to the more modern civil rights movement.
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John Doar, class of 1944, provided legal support to the freedom riders and other civil rights activists in the early 1960s. He escorted James Meredith to register at the University of Mississippi in 1962. Nicholas Katzenbach, class of 1945, represented the federal government at the “Stand in the Schoolhouse Door” and confronted then-Alabama Gov. George Wallace, who unsuccessfully tried to stop the enrollment of two Black students, Vivian Malone and James Hood, at the University of Alabama in June 1963.


The construction of two statues honoring Doar and Katzenbach would promote civil rights awareness on campus far more effectively than the removal of Witherspoon’s statue.


Kevin R. Loughlin, Boston

George Will’s Article:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/01/06/wokeness-attack-on-princeton-statue/

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A Gathering to Honor Nicholas deBelleville Katzenbach

Last week on the summer solstice, June 21, the Katzenbach family held a memorial service in Richardson Auditorium at Princeton University to celebrate the life of Nicholas deBelleville Katzenbach, former attorney general. Everything about the memorial was an apt reflection of the man who passed away on May 8, 2012 at the age of 90.

His quick wit, sense of humor, and decency were on display for all to see through the memories of his friends and family. There was so much laughter in Richardson Auditorium that day that if you didn’t know better you would have thought you walked into a comedy club not a memorial service.

It was only fitting that the memorial was held at Princeton University, his alma mater, and an academic institution for which he cared deeply about, spending years on its Boards of Trustees and also providing pro bono legal services on occasion. Former Princeton President Bill Bowen was the first to pay homage to the man no longer among us. “He was truly ‘one of a kind’: a gentle giant of a man, as kind, compassionate and humorous as he was brilliant,” said Bowen.

Following Bowen were three lifelong friends, all of whom had known Katzenbach for a half-century or more – Herb Sturz, Jack Rosenthal, and Ward Chamberlin, the latter of whom had known Katzenbach since their teenage years at Exeter. He regaled the crowd with stories of a European adventure they took following high school graduation. They went on a biking tour of France and wouldn’t you know it, it happened to coincide with the Tour de France. The boys tried to ride ahead of the pack (avoiding several miles and towns on the route) so they could arrive at the next layover ahead of the cyclists, but hoping to be mistaken for them.

One of the most memorable stories was told by Jack Rosenthal. He recounted a visit Katzenbach made to the LBJ Ranch in which President Johnson took his guests deer hunting. Katzenbach was not thrilled about the prospect. He was not a hunter. “And then,” as Rosenthal told it, “inspiration struck. Katzenbach said, ‘Mr. President, as much as I’d like to shoot a deer, I don’t think I should, I don’t have a Texas hunting license.’” This was particularly problematic given his position, as attorney general and he didn’t want to violate the law. LBJ responded, “You know, I never thought of that.” Both Katzenbach and a deer were spared.

The three friends were followed by Katzenbach’s four children, as different as can be, but all inherited Katzenbach’s wit and knack for storytelling. The last of his children to speak was his daughter, Mimi. Her theatrical background and stage presence commanded attention. She explained why there was a Bloodgood Maple tree on the stage. The answer can be traced to the Revolutionary War and Katzenbach’s namesake, Dr. Nicholas deBelleville.  As she said, goodness flowed through his veins. During the Battle of Trenton, Dr. deBelleville ordered both sides to carry their wounded to a bloodgood maple tree in the middle of the battlefield and he treated them all. “Like his namesake on the battlefield,” said Mimi, “Dad did not discriminate among those who are wounded in the fight for freedom and justice.”

After the service everyone retired to the Prospect House, a Victorian mansion in the center of campus, which once housed Princeton University presidents such as Woodrow Wilson. At the Prospect House friends, family and colleagues from as far back as Katzenbach’s days in the Kennedy and Johnson Administrations to his tenure as general counsel at IBM, and beyond, mingled and reminisced about the man who not only impacted the hundreds in attendance, but also this nation.