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 'The Romeo
Club' loves starting the day at cafe That's 'Retired Old Men Eating Out,' in case you were
wondering
By David M. Weinstein The Princeton Packet Friday, Feb. 23,
2001
 Members of "The Romeo Club"
that gathered on a recent Thursday are, clockwise from top
left, Sergio Bonotto, Tom Hartmann, Robert Lessing, Stuart
Robson, Edward (Big Ed) Coda, Lester Tibbals Jr., Marshall
Clagett and Wesley McCaughan.
Staff photo
by Frank Wojciechowski |

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Call them an eclectic Princeton
goulash. Thursday morning, they were nine
strong around a table at The Cafe, a coffee bar at Bargain Books in
the Princeton Shopping Center. Some days they
are 13 strong — a full group — though they average eight or
nine. "You have to like doughnuts and coffee,"
said Sergio Bonotto, a retired Union Carbide chemist-turned-sketch
artist, whose collegial greeting cards can be found in stores
throughout Princeton "I don't want to be ID'd
with chocolate and coffee," responded Marshall Clagett, 85,
professor emeritus at the Institute for Advanced Study — an expert
in the ways of medieval scientists. This
Thursday morning, they are mostly septuagenarians, with one
octogenarian thrown in for good measure. "I'm
the baby," said Mr. Bonotto, 75. Except for one
who has been married a mere 49 years, they have all passed golden
anniversary stage — each a one-marriage
man. "The credit should go to our wives," said
Robert Lessing, 79, retired from DuPont, where he learned and
exercised his expertise in textile and synthetic fibers. "Are you
going to quote that?" They are also a retired
research chemist, professors emeritus of journalism and psychology
at Rutgers, the former and first headmaster at Princeton Day School,
a local tax assessor and perhaps the foremost and most highly
regarded scholar on medieval science in the
world. "He won't tell you that, but it's true,"
said Wesley McCaughan, 76, about the 85-year-old Dr. Clagett, who
sat to his right. All but three were officers
in World War II; two of those three were enlisted
men. "We don't ask them to walk a few paces
behind us," said the smiling retired Lt. Lessing, U. S. Navy, as if
it's an old joke. "No salutes here," quickly
added Lt. Commander Edward "Big Ed" Coda, 78, a fellow retired naval
officer, successful salesman and current "expert in avoiding
work." All are Retired Old Men Eating Out or
members of The Romeo Club, to whom Ebenezer Scrooge is a stated but
somewhat misleading inspiration. Curmudgeons, though, these men are
not. They came together at The Cafe a few
months ago, but started conversing at tables over coffee five years
before that, meeting after exercise walks at The Russian Tea Room,
the bakery at the shopping center. "One in the
same" they are, said Mr. McCaughan, a former teacher at Princeton
Day School, where he was director of
admissions. No headline or rumor or obscure
detail has a chance to escape their collective good-natured and
serious scrutiny, their wit and quickness of banter, their depth in
conversation. "When I'm not busy, I lean on the
counter here and eavesdrop," The Cafe's owner, John Cross, said
Thursday morning, throwing his glance to the two tables pulled
together at which the Romeos sit every Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and
Friday. "The wisdom is amazing; their open-mindedness and knowledge
mind-boggling." "These kinds of groups are
forming in many communities," Mr. Lessing said. "Men after 70 are
looking for structure when the career is over. This is a career
substitute." There are no retired misanthropes
here. If one showed up, he would most definitely be welcome, but
would likely be made to smile or get conversational about politics
or history or both as they relate to World War
II. "Everything in the past comes out here,"
said 85-year old Lester Tibbals Jr., retired from his American
history lectures at Princeton Day School. "You
could say the place is awash in past glories," Mr. Lessing said.
"The dominance of the past is in all our
conversations." "That's what you can remember.
You can't remember 10 minutes ago," said Mr. McCaughan, breaking
into a smile. The leader of this group, Mr.
McCaughan is himself remembered well. In the
book, "Still Me," authored by actor Christopher Reeve — a former
Princeton Day School student of Mr. McCaughan — Mr. Reeve directly
relates his decision to pursue acting with classroom methods used by
the ancient history instructor to convey lectures into
storytelling. A man who may or may not be as
fondly remembered is former Princeton Borough and Township Tax
Assessor Stuart Robson, who will be 87 next
month. "The most hated man in town," Mr.
McCaughan said, good-naturedly. "We pick up a
few followers here every once in a while," Mr. Robson
said. One, a woman, walks by with a cup of
coffee and is all smiles for the table of
men. "They flirt with us because they know
they're safe," Mr. Coda said. Mr. McCaughan
said the essence of the group is
friendship. "As more guys sat down, and as time
went on, we liked what we saw," he said. "There
are differences of opinion," said Thomas Hartmann, the first
headmaster at Princeton Day School and professor emeritus of
journalism at Rutgers. "We keep our passions in
check," he said. "Well, some of us — not all.
For more stories from The Princeton Packet, go to http://www.princetonpacket.com/.
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