The genesis of this book emerged on Saturday, June 24, 1967, the interim day between Summit meetings. At a modest home in Glassboro,
Dean of Instruction Stanton Langworthy and I had a meeting of our own concerned with planning ways and means for gathering source materials relating to the most significant event in the college's and town's history. In each of our minds was the thought of establishing somewhere in the college a Holly Bush Summit archives room where scholars later could find and use primary data for the preparation of research reports. But to each of us the archives project alone lacked completeness; an element in our planning seemed missing. Why wait years to gather and string together Summit Conference data in organized form? Why not start writing the
Summit at Holly Bush story while memories were fresh and data uncluttered with archival dust? These were the flashes of insight that got this volume underway.
At attempt has been made in this book to weave together the multitudinous details and events of the Summit Conference. I have tried to give readers the feeling of what it was like to have been at the actual scene as the Summitry excitement gripped Glassboro. By so doing it is my hope that readers will gain an understanding of how a small college and town faced up to the problem of hosting, with less than a day's advanced notice, the leaders of the world's two nuclear powers.
At this point I wish to express appreciation to persons without whose aid this book could not have been written. Throughout the hot and humid months of July and August, Glassboro students