Hundreds attend Chapel memorial service for Goheen
To the measured words of Scripture, the ancient wisdom of Sophocles, and the
strains of Duke Ellington, the University community remembered the life of Princeton's
16th president, Robert F. Goheen '40 *48, during a service April 27 in the University
Chapel. President Shirley Tilghman, former president William G. Bowen *58, and
University officials past and present were among the hundreds of people in attendance.
Goheen died March 31 at the University Medical Center at the age of 88.
Goheen had planned much of his memorial service several years ago, sending
his ideas to his children in a letter marked "Someday." They included
the 23rd Psalm, the Prayer of St. Francis, and a "Prayer for Princeton," along
with two hymns. A lover of jazz, Goheen asked that the prelude to the service
be Ellington's "It's Freedom," performed by the Chapel Choir. His longtime
friend, James I. Armstrong '41 *49, read an ode from Antigone.
Bowen delivered words of remembrance. Goheen, he said, "would not have
wanted to be remembered, for . . . buildings built and dollars raised. His most
lasting contribution was, without question, the values, the spirit, he infused
into Princeton during his 70 years of association with the University." Bowen
in particular paid tribute to Goheen's foresight in leading Princeton towards
a more racially diverse student body and to his open-mindedness, which led him
to change his opinion and embrace coeducation.
Before the postlude – a recording of Benny Carter's Harlem Renaissance
Suite – and after a quick consultation with the Goheen family, former dean
of the chapel Frederick Borsch '57 announced an impromptu change in the program:
the singing of "Old Nassau."
For all the words delivered from the pulpit, the remembrance that Goheen
would have appreciated most may have come from one of the pews. An African-American
woman from the Class of '75 introduced herself to a fellow alumnus from the late
'50s. Although Goheen had retired before she graduated, the woman remarked simply, "I
wouldn't be here without him."