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Lyr Req: Old Nassau, The Rose and Silver Gray |
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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Old Nassau, The Rose and Silver Gray From: Haruo Date: 04 Feb 01 - 07:28 PM I've started a separate thread just for the Rose and Silver Gray, in case the title "Old Nassau" was misleading. Liland |
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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Old Nassau, The Rose and Silver Gray From: Mark Cohen Date: 21 Jan 01 - 11:05 PM Here's a sobering thought. The land for the College of New Jersey (the name was changed to Princeton University at the sesquicentennial in 1896) was donated by a man named Belcher. Generations of Princetonians are thankful that he declined the offer to have the first college building named for him, but instead asked that the honor go to his favorite monarch, William of Orange, of the House of Nassau. Aloha, Mark '73 |
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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Old Nassau, The Rose and Silver Gray From: Sarah2 Date: 21 Jan 01 - 12:21 AM Sorry, no luck with my supposed Vassar grad at work: wrong college altogether. Sarah |
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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Old Nassau, The Rose and Silver Gray From: Joe Offer Date: 20 Jan 01 - 11:28 PM Liland, I just picked up a copy of the Abridged Academy Song-Book, published by Ginn in 1898 (it cost me two bucks). It has the same verses MMario posted, but in the middle it has this as the third verse:
Note how the chorus goes in this book: Shall never pass away, my boys. First two choruses begin with "In praise of old Nassau, my boys. Three is "Shall Never Pass Away"; four "In praise of old Nassau" again, and five "Long Life to old Nassau." Apparently, the first line of each chorus is the last line of each verse. Sorry, the book does not have Vassar songs. -Joe Offer- |
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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Old Nassau, The Rose and Silver Gray From: Haruo Date: 11 Jan 01 - 09:29 PM Thanks MMario (and I'm still hoping anent the Vassar tune, Sarah2)... MMario, I had seen the second page you linked to but had given up on trying to decipher it, because although it states What was actually displayed below was obviously not the words and music of anything, and then there were all those disconcerting question marks... ;-) I am still interested in a small MIDI of the tune, if anyone has one, though for my personal purposes (being a Yalie) I can get by fine singing it to "I fee'd a lad at Michaelmas"... Let music rule the fleeting hour,Liland |
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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Old Nassau, The Rose and Silver Gray From: Mark Cohen Date: 11 Jan 01 - 06:50 PM Hey thanks, MMario. I'm a Princeton alum ('73), and I never knew all those verses even existed! When we sang Old Nassau at the end of every football or basketball game, we would all put our hands (or hats, presumably) over our hearts and then extend our arms out, on every other beat, if you get the picture. A little tedious, but impressive when a whole stadium is doing it. Old silly habits die hard in the Ivy League...I think Yalies still wave handkerchiefs. Aloha, and a locomotive to you all Mark |
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Subject: Lyr Add: OLD NASSAU (Peck, Langlotz) From: MMario Date: 11 Jan 01 - 11:44 AM Old Nassau
OLD NASSAU |
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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Old Nassau, The Rose and Silver Gray From: Sarah2 Date: 10 Jan 01 - 09:09 PM Liland, Have e-mailed a Princeton alumnus I know for the words to "Old Nassau" and hope to have that soon, so keep checking here. I think one of the women at my workplace is a Vassar alumna, too, but she's out of town this week. Will ask (not sure, though...) Sarah |
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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Old Nassau, The Rose and Silver Gray From: Joe Offer Date: 10 Jan 01 - 07:14 PM Hi, Liland - the Levy site has The Guard of Old Nassau (click) - not the one you want, but I thought it might interest you. -Joe Offer- |
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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Old Nassau, The Rose and Silver Gray From: Sorcha Date: 10 Jan 01 - 06:18 PM Liland, I found this: 1868, Oct. 11
Ellen Swallow, '70, wrote to her mother: "I send you a bit of our college colors, rose and silver gray... One and onehalf yards each we have and wear in some form on public occasions." The colors signified the dawn of women's education, "the rose of sunlight breaking through the gray of women's intellectual life." |
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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Old Nassau, The Rose and Silver Gray From: Haruo Date: 04 Jan 01 - 09:05 PM refresh |
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Subject: Old Nassau, The Rose and Silver Gray... From: Haruo Date: 03 Jan 01 - 12:19 AM The Princeton alma mater since 1859 has been "Old Nassau"; the first stanza and refrain are as follows, but the rest I have been unable to locate. Anybody got it? Tune ev'ry heart and ev'ry voice |
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