BEYOND WINTER: The Irrelevant Memories of An Old Man—
Today is the 70th anniversary of my first day at Indiana University, the start of orientation week in 1955. The 13th was a Monday that year.
As we get really old, and are less able to do things that make memories, we depend upon memories we’ve already stored up, especially the memories of the hinge times in our lives—a wedding, the birth of a child or grandchild, taking a courageous stand, the moment we felt called to a vocation, the first day of college…
There are very few people left for whom the song below will make sense, but some of my best memories are from the first week, orientation week, of my freshman year at IU, Sept 1955, especially working in the dining room at Rogers Center, where grad students lived, and even more especially “…walking back to good old Linden Hall.”
There are some new dorms named for trees now, even a Linden, but the old Trees Center--hurriedly-built officer training barracks left over from WWII--has been long since demolished. The Education Building stands there now.
Linden and Pine were the dorms for kids on The Residence Scholarship Plan, smart kids who wanted to go to college but didn’t have the money to do so. Unlike kids in the other dorms, we furnished our own sheets and pillows and such, and did our own maid and janitorial work, and worked at least ten hours per week, and maintained a B grade average. [Jon, am I right about that grade average?]
After working breakfast or lunch, we denizens of The Residence Scholarship Program who worked at the Rogers Center dining cafeteria, would walk “home” together: Mary Winstead, Phyllis Brown [I officiated at her wedding to Henry Oakes], Susie [Sara] Hayes, Bill Ridge, Jon Stroble.
The girls had donned their yellow uniform dresses before going over to work. The boys slipped on short white jackets once we got there.
This is to the tune of Love Letters in the Sand.
IN THE DAYS OF LINDEN HALL
On a day like today, when skies were never gray
Walking back to good old Linden Hall
The girls were dressed in yellow
Our hearts were young and mellow
Walking back to good old linden hall
The air was full of hopes and dreams that fall
As we walked, we always had a ball
Now that I can barely stand
Wouldn’t it be grand
To be walking back to good old Linden Hall
The days were always fair, there was romance in the air
Walking back to good old Linden Hall
Only the sky was blue
There was nothing we couldn’t do
Walking back to good old Linden Hall
Our hearts back then were always young and free
We gave no thought to what might come to be
Now as I live in memory
It is so sweet to be
Walking back to good old Linden Hall
John Robert McFarland