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Millwoch
September 16th, 2008, 07:43 AM
States that no current Socon member has ever played an Ivy league opponent. Should be a fun one in Charleston. Princeton has only flown one other time in their history....wow. They get to see what some southern football is all about. We go up there next year to see what they are all about next year.

http://www.charleston.net/news/2008/sep/16/higgins_ivy_foe_like_us54637/

CID1990
September 16th, 2008, 08:02 AM
It's gonna be like that time I wasted that village in the 'Nam.

citdog
September 16th, 2008, 08:29 AM
It appears as if we have a "Second Manassas Situation" with real live Yankee scum to beat up on!


THANK YOU LORD FOR THE OPPORTUNITY!


REVENGE OUR GLORIOUS CONFEDERATE DEAD!

Ivytalk
September 16th, 2008, 08:42 AM
It appears as if we have a "Second Manassas Situation" with real live Yankee scum to beat up on!


THANK YOU LORD FOR THE OPPORTUNITY!


REVENGE OUR GLORIOUS CONFEDERATE DEAD!

Careful, citdog! Princeton is by far the Ivy school of choice for refined suthun genmin!xpeacex

bonarae
September 16th, 2008, 08:51 AM
The Citadel and Princeton are indeed making history in the world of Ivy football as well as the SoCon. It will be the first time in decades (since the Ivy League formed) that an Ivy team will play a team from the South.

Is an Harvard-Appalachian State game possible? Probably. Is it feasible? Not so, unless the Ivies go to 11 games. xnonono2x

I'm really looking forward to The Citadel-Princeton as well as Harvard-Holy Cross!

Ivytalk
September 16th, 2008, 08:56 AM
The Citadel and Princeton are indeed making history in the world of Ivy football as well as the SoCon. It will be the first time in decades (since the Ivy League formed) that an Ivy team will play a team from the South.

Is an Harvard-Appalachian State game possible? Probably. Is it feasible? Not so, unless the Ivies go to 11 games. xnonono2x

I'm really looking forward to The Citadel-Princeton as well as Harvard-Holy Cross!

bonarae, Harvard had a home-and-home with William & Mary back in the 80s. The matchup was touted as a meeting of the two oldest schools in the US, but not as a north-south thing.

citdog
September 16th, 2008, 09:00 AM
The matchup was touted as a meeting of the two oldest schools in the US, but not as a north-south thing.

THIS ONE IS.....WE HATE YOU.....WE ALWAYS WILL......

appfan2008
September 16th, 2008, 09:00 AM
i always love to see the ivy league brankching out of their little niche...

Ivytalk
September 16th, 2008, 09:02 AM
THIS ONE IS.....WE HATE YOU.....WE ALWAYS WILL......

I think Princeton will handle your hatred. xrolleyesx Whether the Tigers can handle The Citadel is a different matter entirely.

citdog
September 16th, 2008, 09:22 AM
I think Princeton will handle your hatred. xrolleyesx Whether the Tigers can handle The Citadel is a different matter entirely.

I TRULY HOPE THERE ARE NO INCIDENTS BETWEEN THE SOUTH CAROLINA CORPS OF CADETS AND PRINCETON STUDENTS OVER THE WAR IN IRAQ..

COULDN'T JUST SAY THE WAR.....THAT TERM IS HOW WE REFER TO THE LATE UNPLEASANTNESS

Ivytalk
September 16th, 2008, 09:24 AM
I TRULY HOPE THERE ARE NO INCIDENTS BETWEEN THE SOUTH CAROLINA CORPS OF CADETS AND PRINCETON STUDENTS OVER THE WAR.

Except maybe the Princeton TD dance on the seaward redoubt of Fort Sumter!:D

citdog
September 16th, 2008, 09:27 AM
Except maybe the Princeton TD dance on the seaward redoubt of Fort Sumter!:D

"THAT IS SOUTH CAROLINA BLOOD SIR.....YOU DO NOT KNOW IT"

bonarae
September 16th, 2008, 09:41 AM
bonarae, Harvard had a home-and-home with William & Mary back in the 80s. The matchup was touted as a meeting of the two oldest schools in the US, but not as a north-south thing.

Oops, forgot to notice that. They last played in 1993, where they were beaten by a wide margin. (four times in the 80's and twice in the early 90's since WWII)

elon77
September 16th, 2008, 09:49 AM
xnodx
Except maybe the Princeton TD dance on the seaward redoubt of Fort Sumter!:D

I might just have to fly down and catch this game. It might just be a rowdy good time. I've been worried about citdog, we haven't heard much from him lately, but I see he is ready for this fight.xnodx

Appstate29
September 16th, 2008, 10:17 AM
The Citadel and Princeton are indeed making history in the world of Ivy football as well as the SoCon. It will be the first time in decades (since the Ivy League formed) that an Ivy team will play a team from the South.

Is an Harvard-Appalachian State game possible? Probably. Is it feasible? Not so, unless the Ivies go to 11 games. xnonono2x

I'm really looking forward to The Citadel-Princeton as well as Harvard-Holy Cross!

Lets make it HAPPEN!!

terrierbob
September 16th, 2008, 10:34 AM
Except maybe the Princeton TD dance on the seaward redoubt of Fort Sumter!:D

xlolx xlolx xlolx xlolx xlolx xlolx xlolx xlolx

Go...gate
September 16th, 2008, 01:47 PM
I TRULY HOPE THERE ARE NO INCIDENTS BETWEEN THE SOUTH CAROLINA CORPS OF CADETS AND PRINCETON STUDENTS OVER THE WAR IN IRAQ..

COULDN'T JUST SAY THE WAR.....THAT TERM IS HOW WE REFER TO THE LATE UNPLEASANTNESS

Did you invite the Princeton Band? If you did, there will be lots of fun. They have been banned from West Point since the 1980's.

Millwoch
September 16th, 2008, 02:00 PM
Princeton University Band
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

The Princeton University Band behind Nassau Hall.The Princeton University Band serves as the marching band and pep band of Princeton University. Like most other Ivy League bands, it is a scramble band. To members and fans, it is often known as the PUB (pronounced Pea You Bee) or simply The Band. Many alumni refer to it as the Tiger Band.

Contents [hide]
1 About The PUB
1.1 Supporting Princeton Athletics
1.2 Uniforms
1.3 Alumni and Friends
2 Traditions
2.1 Double-Double Rotating P
2.2 The White Castle Meat Product Tolerance Marathon
2.3 Humor Award
2.4 Favorite Songs
3 The Princeton University Band Song
4 Trivia
5 External links



[edit] About The PUB

Concert during Princeton Reunions 2007Founded in 1919, the PUB is a recognized student organization of Princeton University and is almost entirely run by a twelve-member officer corps consisting of the President, Drum Major, Head Manager ("Mom"), Student Conductor (the "Stud Conductor"), Treasurer, four Drillmasters ("DMs"), Alumni Coordinator and two Librarians ("Libes"). A professional music advisor, paid out of the band's operating fund, is the only non-student involved in directing the band.


[edit] Supporting Princeton Athletics
During the fall football season, the band performs at nearly all Princeton football games, both home and away. At each game, besides playing in the stands during pauses in the game, the band puts on a pregame show and a halftime show, each of which consists of one to three songs with accompanying formations, interspersed with a humorous script. The PUB also has a repertoire of cheers which are invoked throughout the game - often mildly offensive, but amusing nonetheless. After the conclusion of the football season, the Band transforms into a pep band and plays in the stands at select Princeton hockey, basketball, and lacrosse games. Other than the absence of scrambling and formations, the Band's presence at these events is much the same as at football games.


[edit] Uniforms

Some jackets, hats and instruments.The standard uniforms of the PUB, used during football season and for parades, Princeton Reunions, and other formal events, consist of black pants, white shoes, white shirts with solid black ties, Italian "boater" hats, and distinctive orange-and-black plaid jackets. The Band actually owns the rights to the particular plaid design found on the jackets. For hockey and basketball games, the band adopts less formal attire: orange-and-black striped rugby shirts and jeans. At lacrosse games in the spring, the band wears the hats and jackets (from the standard uniform) with jeans. Also, graduating seniors find a way to adorn their beer jackets with the plaid in some fashion, making alums of the band easy to spot.


[edit] Alumni and Friends
Friends of Tiger Band (FOTB) is the official organization for alumni and other supporters of the PUB. Proving that the PUB is forever, band members automatically become members of FOTB upon graduation. FOTB has three key functions: (1) hosting Band Reunions following the Home Big Three game and the P-Rade, (2) publishing the FOTB newsletter, and most importantly (3) providing support, both financially and in dealings with the University administration.


[edit] Traditions

[edit] Double-Double Rotating P
Traditionally, the PUB ends its football pregame shows with a formation known as the "Double-Double Rotating P." The formation is a large outline letter "P" comprising an outer loop in a "P" shape and a smaller inner loop forming the interior of the letter. In this formation, the PUB plays the march "Going Back to Nassau Hall." When the band reaches the trio, the P itself remains stationary, but the members of the band start to move around the perimeter of the P, with the outer loop moving clockwise and the inner loop moving counterclockwise. The band plays the trio twice, and upon beginning the second time through the trio, the two loops reverse their respective directions.

At home games, this performance immediately leads into performance of The Star-Spangled Banner.


[edit] The White Castle Meat Product Tolerance Marathon
At the conclusion of each school year, the band takes a trip to White Castle and holds an eating contest. No time limits are enforced. Whoever can eat the most Slyders is named King of the Castle for that year. Style points are awarded for some eating methods, including:

Stacking two burgers and eating them simultaneously (Two-at-a-Time, Three-at-a-Time, etc.)
Stuffing the entire burger in your mouth and swallowing it (the White Castle Chug)
The current record holders are David R. Turner III '02 and Erik Williamson '05, who both have recorded 32 burgers in one sitting. For more information on the competition, refer to the official website.


[edit] Humor Award
The Band is famous for its ribald humor. As an incentive to motivate members to maintain this tradition the band for many years awarded a pen/penholder set to the band member who was judged to have performed the most outrageous antic during a public band performance. The pen holder was engraved with the saying "The Pen is Mightier than the Sword". This sounds harmless enough until you consider that the space between the second and third word was consistently left out, with the "pen" shaped to match the "typo."


[edit] Favorite Songs
Princeton Songs
The Princeton Cannon Song
Going Back to Nassau Hall
Princeton Forward
Tiger Rag
Chuck Mangione's Grammy-winning theme to The Children of Sanchez
Rock Lobster - traditionally, at a certain point in this song, band members lie down on the ground and wave their legs like lobsters, a perennial crowd-pleaser.
Tequila
The Band's repertoire includes dozens of other songs, principally featuring classic rock and, more recently, '90s hits.


[edit] The Princeton University Band Song
The lyrics to the band's theme song:

Oh here we are, the Princeton Band,
Playing songs of Old Nassau.
That old refrain will sound again,
And you will hear the tiger roar!
The slide trombone, the saxophone,
And the bass drum sounding grand!
With a boom, boom, boom!
And a zoom, zoom, zoom!
Oh, when you hear the Princeton Band!

[edit] Trivia
The PUB has an ongoing presence in, of all media outlets, Sports Illustrated. Among the highlights:
The PUB appeared on the cover of the October 17, 1955 issue. This was the first time any Ivy League students appeared on the cover.[1]
After Princeton's stunning knockout of the UCLA men's basketball team in the 1996 NCAA tournament, SI wrote "If there really is a hoop heaven, the house band would be Princeton's, troubadours in straw hats who played the theme from "Underdog" late in the Tigers' victory."
More recently the PUB was cited in the on-line version of SI. Paul Zimmerman, in his column of February 26, 2004, claimed "for years, the fastest rendition [of the Star-Spangled Banner] I regularly clocked was that of the Princeton band. Always around 53 seconds."[2]
The Band won ESPN's Battle of the Marching Bands in 1996. The other competitors in this online poll were: Rice, Wisconsin, Ohio State, Grambling, Michigan, Stanford, and Texas A&M. It is suspected, though unconfirmed, that the Band won partly due to very strong voting in their favor by bands previously eliminated who did not want any of their rival bands to win. None of Princeton's rival bands were in the competition, therefore the PUB was something of a neutral choice.
The Band has been banned from Lafayette College due to an irreverent comedy show of which the administration did not approve.
The Band was also banned from playing at West Point in 1981 because it was not considered to be appropriate entertainment. The Band accepted the offer to attend the game and play in the stands, but did not show up. Instead, the Band organized a touch football game at its practice field, listened to the game on the radio and performed its halftime show. The following year, when West Point played at Princeton, the Band ended its halftime show with a tongue-in-cheek version of "Duty, Honor, Country," a musical adaptation of an address by General of the Army Douglas MacArthur to the cadets of West Point and marched off the field with corncob pipes.[3]
The Band has been on national television playing for the Princeton University basketball team at the NCAA tournament. In 2004, they traveled to Denver to watch the Princeton Tigers take on the Texas Longhorns.
For the 2005 P-Rade at Princeton's Reunions, the weather was threatening to downpour for the first several hours of the festivities. Just as the graduating Class of 2005 was joining the procession, a severe thunderstorm entered the area, soaking eveybody in attendance. Undeterred by the weather, however, the Band led the senior class on to the traditional parade-ending sprint across Poe Field.
Later the same day, the traditional evening orchestra concert celebrating the close of Reunions was cancelled due to the weather, though by the time of the concert itself the storm had long since cleared the area. Never to let an audience go to waste, a small group of band members who had come to watch the concert grabbed instruments and music and assembled to entertain the crowd until the fireworks display an hour later.
During the 1967 Harvard game, nationally televised on ABC, the Band intentionally spelled out the letters NBC. The network was not amused.[4]
The Band is also known to play Guns N' Roses "Welcome to the Jungle" before every home basketball game
When the Princeton football team wins a home game, the Band traditionally performs a concert inside the fountain at Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School.

Millwoch
September 16th, 2008, 02:05 PM
Check out the trivia section. They have pulled many stunts in the past. Corp will be about 10 feet from them when the they make the trip(their website say they are coming down). It could be very interesting.


Princeton University Band


The Princeton University Band behind Nassau Hall.The Princeton University Band serves as the marching band and pep band of Princeton University. Like most other Ivy League bands, it is a scramble band. To members and fans, it is often known as the PUB (pronounced Pea You Bee) or simply The Band. Many alumni refer to it as the Tiger Band.

1 About The PUB
1.1 Supporting Princeton Athletics
1.2 Uniforms
1.3 Alumni and Friends
2 Traditions
2.1 Double-Double Rotating P
2.2 The White Castle Meat Product Tolerance Marathon
2.3 Humor Award
2.4 Favorite Songs
3 The Princeton University Band Song
4 Trivia
5 External links

About The PUB

Concert during Princeton Reunions 2007Founded in 1919, the PUB is a recognized student organization of Princeton University and is almost entirely run by a twelve-member officer corps consisting of the President, Drum Major, Head Manager ("Mom"), Student Conductor (the "Stud Conductor"), Treasurer, four Drillmasters ("DMs"), Alumni Coordinator and two Librarians ("Libes"). A professional music advisor, paid out of the band's operating fund, is the only non-student involved in directing the band.


Supporting Princeton Athletics
During the fall football season, the band performs at nearly all Princeton football games, both home and away. At each game, besides playing in the stands during pauses in the game, the band puts on a pregame show and a halftime show, each of which consists of one to three songs with accompanying formations, interspersed with a humorous script. The PUB also has a repertoire of cheers which are invoked throughout the game - often mildly offensive, but amusing nonetheless. After the conclusion of the football season, the Band transforms into a pep band and plays in the stands at select Princeton hockey, basketball, and lacrosse games. Other than the absence of scrambling and formations, the Band's presence at these events is much the same as at football games.

Uniforms

Some jackets, hats and instruments.The standard uniforms of the PUB, used during football season and for parades, Princeton Reunions, and other formal events, consist of black pants, white shoes, white shirts with solid black ties, Italian "boater" hats, and distinctive orange-and-black plaid jackets. The Band actually owns the rights to the particular plaid design found on the jackets. For hockey and basketball games, the band adopts less formal attire: orange-and-black striped rugby shirts and jeans. At lacrosse games in the spring, the band wears the hats and jackets (from the standard uniform) with jeans. Also, graduating seniors find a way to adorn their beer jackets with the plaid in some fashion, making alums of the band easy to spot.

Alumni and Friends
Friends of Tiger Band (FOTB) is the official organization for alumni and other supporters of the PUB. Proving that the PUB is forever, band members automatically become members of FOTB upon graduation. FOTB has three key functions: (1) hosting Band Reunions following the Home Big Three game and the P-Rade, (2) publishing the FOTB newsletter, and most importantly (3) providing support, both financially and in dealings with the University administration.


Traditions

Double-Double Rotating P
Traditionally, the PUB ends its football pregame shows with a formation known as the "Double-Double Rotating P." The formation is a large outline letter "P" comprising an outer loop in a "P" shape and a smaller inner loop forming the interior of the letter. In this formation, the PUB plays the march "Going Back to Nassau Hall." When the band reaches the trio, the P itself remains stationary, but the members of the band start to move around the perimeter of the P, with the outer loop moving clockwise and the inner loop moving counterclockwise. The band plays the trio twice, and upon beginning the second time through the trio, the two loops reverse their respective directions.

At home games, this performance immediately leads into performance of The Star-Spangled Banner.


The White Castle Meat Product Tolerance Marathon
At the conclusion of each school year, the band takes a trip to White Castle and holds an eating contest. No time limits are enforced. Whoever can eat the most Slyders is named King of the Castle for that year. Style points are awarded for some eating methods, including:

Stacking two burgers and eating them simultaneously (Two-at-a-Time, Three-at-a-Time, etc.)
Stuffing the entire burger in your mouth and swallowing it (the White Castle Chug)
The current record holders are David R. Turner III '02 and Erik Williamson '05, who both have recorded 32 burgers in one sitting. For more information on the competition, refer to the official website.


Humor Award
The Band is famous for its ribald humor. As an incentive to motivate members to maintain this tradition the band for many years awarded a pen/penholder set to the band member who was judged to have performed the most outrageous antic during a public band performance. The pen holder was engraved with the saying "The Pen is Mightier than the Sword". This sounds harmless enough until you consider that the space between the second and third word was consistently left out, with the "pen" shaped to match the "typo."


Favorite Songs
Princeton Songs
The Princeton Cannon Song
Going Back to Nassau Hall
Princeton Forward
Tiger Rag
Chuck Mangione's Grammy-winning theme to The Children of Sanchez
Rock Lobster - traditionally, at a certain point in this song, band members lie down on the ground and wave their legs like lobsters, a perennial crowd-pleaser.
Tequila
The Band's repertoire includes dozens of other songs, principally featuring classic rock and, more recently, '90s hits.


The Princeton University Band Song
The lyrics to the band's theme song:

Oh here we are, the Princeton Band,
Playing songs of Old Nassau.
That old refrain will sound again,
And you will hear the tiger roar!
The slide trombone, the saxophone,
And the bass drum sounding grand!
With a boom, boom, boom!
And a zoom, zoom, zoom!
Oh, when you hear the Princeton Band!

Trivia
The PUB has an ongoing presence in, of all media outlets, Sports Illustrated. Among the highlights:
The PUB appeared on the cover of the October 17, 1955 issue. This was the first time any Ivy League students appeared on the cover.[1]
After Princeton's stunning knockout of the UCLA men's basketball team in the 1996 NCAA tournament, SI wrote "If there really is a hoop heaven, the house band would be Princeton's, troubadours in straw hats who played the theme from "Underdog" late in the Tigers' victory."
More recently the PUB was cited in the on-line version of SI. Paul Zimmerman, in his column of February 26, 2004, claimed "for years, the fastest rendition [of the Star-Spangled Banner] I regularly clocked was that of the Princeton band. Always around 53 seconds."[2]
The Band won ESPN's Battle of the Marching Bands in 1996. The other competitors in this online poll were: Rice, Wisconsin, Ohio State, Grambling, Michigan, Stanford, and Texas A&M. It is suspected, though unconfirmed, that the Band won partly due to very strong voting in their favor by bands previously eliminated who did not want any of their rival bands to win. None of Princeton's rival bands were in the competition, therefore the PUB was something of a neutral choice.
The Band has been banned from Lafayette College due to an irreverent comedy show of which the administration did not approve.
The Band was also banned from playing at West Point in 1981 because it was not considered to be appropriate entertainment. The Band accepted the offer to attend the game and play in the stands, but did not show up. Instead, the Band organized a touch football game at its practice field, listened to the game on the radio and performed its halftime show. The following year, when West Point played at Princeton, the Band ended its halftime show with a tongue-in-cheek version of "Duty, Honor, Country," a musical adaptation of an address by General of the Army Douglas MacArthur to the cadets of West Point and marched off the field with corncob pipes.[3]
The Band has been on national television playing for the Princeton University basketball team at the NCAA tournament. In 2004, they traveled to Denver to watch the Princeton Tigers take on the Texas Longhorns.
For the 2005 P-Rade at Princeton's Reunions, the weather was threatening to downpour for the first several hours of the festivities. Just as the graduating Class of 2005 was joining the procession, a severe thunderstorm entered the area, soaking eveybody in attendance. Undeterred by the weather, however, the Band led the senior class on to the traditional parade-ending sprint across Poe Field.
Later the same day, the traditional evening orchestra concert celebrating the close of Reunions was cancelled due to the weather, though by the time of the concert itself the storm had long since cleared the area. Never to let an audience go to waste, a small group of band members who had come to watch the concert grabbed instruments and music and assembled to entertain the crowd until the fireworks display an hour later.
During the 1967 Harvard game, nationally televised on ABC, the Band intentionally spelled out the letters NBC. The network was not amused.[4]
The Band is also known to play Guns N' Roses "Welcome to the Jungle" before every home basketball game
When the Princeton football team wins a home game, the Band traditionally performs a concert inside the fountain at Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School.

citdog
September 16th, 2008, 02:06 PM
[QUOTE=Millwoch;1107291]Princeton University Band
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

The Princeton University Band behind Nassau Hall.The Princeton University Band serves as the marching band and pep band of Princeton University. Like most other Ivy League bands, it is a scramble band. To members and fans, it is often known as the PUB (pronounced Pea You Bee) or simply The Band. Many alumni refer to it as the Tiger Band.

Contents [hide]
1 About The PUB
1.1 Supporting Princeton Athletics
1.2 Uniforms
1.3 Alumni and Friends
2 Traditions
2.1 Double-Double Rotating P
2.2 The White Castle Meat Product Tolerance Marathon
2.3 Humor Award
2.4 Favorite Songs
3 The Princeton University Band Song
4 Trivia
5 External links



[edit] About The PUB

Concert during Princeton Reunions 2007Founded in 1919, the PUB is a recognized student organization of Princeton University and is almost entirely run by a twelve-member officer corps consisting of the President, Drum Major, Head Manager ("Mom"), Student Conductor (the "Stud Conductor"), Treasurer, four Drillmasters ("DMs"), Alumni Coordinator and two Librarians ("Libes"). A professional music advisor, paid out of the band's operating fund, is the only non-student involved in directing the band.


[edit] Supporting Princeton Athletics
During the fall football season, the band performs at nearly all Princeton football games, both home and away. At each game, besides playing in the stands during pauses in the game, the band puts on a pregame show and a halftime show, each of which consists of one to three songs with accompanying formations, interspersed with a humorous script. The PUB also has a repertoire of cheers which are invoked throughout the game - often mildly offensive, but amusing nonetheless. After the conclusion of the football season, the Band transforms into a pep band and plays in the stands at select Princeton hockey, basketball, and lacrosse games. Other than the absence of scrambling and formations, the Band's presence at these events is much the same as at football games.


[edit] Uniforms

Some jackets, hats and instruments.The standard uniforms of the PUB, used during football season and for parades, Princeton Reunions, and other formal events, consist of black pants, white shoes, white shirts with solid black ties, Italian "boater" hats, and distinctive orange-and-black plaid jackets. The Band actually owns the rights to the particular plaid design found on the jackets. For hockey and basketball games, the band adopts less formal attire: orange-and-black striped rugby shirts and jeans. At lacrosse games in the spring, the band wears the hats and jackets (from the standard uniform) with jeans. Also, graduating seniors find a way to adorn their beer jackets with the plaid in some fashion, making alums of the band easy to spot.


[edit] Alumni and Friends
Friends of Tiger Band (FOTB) is the official organization for alumni and other supporters of the PUB. Proving that the PUB is forever, band members automatically become members of FOTB upon graduation. FOTB has three key functions: (1) hosting Band Reunions following the Home Big Three game and the P-Rade, (2) publishing the FOTB newsletter, and most importantly (3) providing support, both financially and in dealings with the University administration.


[edit] Traditions

[edit] Double-Double Rotating P
Traditionally, the PUB ends its football pregame shows with a formation known as the "Double-Double Rotating P." The formation is a large outline letter "P" comprising an outer loop in a "P" shape and a smaller inner loop forming the interior of the letter. In this formation, the PUB plays the march "Going Back to Nassau Hall." When the band reaches the trio, the P itself remains stationary, but the members of the band start to move around the perimeter of the P, with the outer loop moving clockwise and the inner loop moving counterclockwise. The band plays the trio twice, and upon beginning the second time through the trio, the two loops reverse their respective directions.

At home games, this performance immediately leads into performance of The Star-Spangled Banner.


[edit] The White Castle Meat Product Tolerance Marathon
At the conclusion of each school year, the band takes a trip to White Castle and holds an eating contest. No time limits are enforced. Whoever can eat the most Slyders is named King of the Castle for that year. Style points are awarded for some eating methods, including:

Stacking two burgers and eating them simultaneously (Two-at-a-Time, Three-at-a-Time, etc.)
Stuffing the entire burger in your mouth and swallowing it (the White Castle Chug)
The current record holders are David R. Turner III '02 and Erik Williamson '05, who both have recorded 32 burgers in one sitting. For more information on the competition, refer to the official website.


[edit] Humor Award
The Band is famous for its ribald humor. As an incentive to motivate members to maintain this tradition the band for many years awarded a pen/penholder set to the band member who was judged to have performed the most outrageous antic during a public band performance. The pen holder was engraved with the saying "The Pen is Mightier than the Sword". This sounds harmless enough until you consider that the space between the second and third word was consistently left out, with the "pen" shaped to match the "typo."


[edit] Favorite Songs
Princeton Songs
The Princeton Cannon Song
Going Back to Nassau Hall
Princeton Forward
Tiger Rag
Chuck Mangione's Grammy-winning theme to The Children of Sanchez
Rock Lobster - traditionally, at a certain point in this song, band members lie down on the ground and wave their legs like lobsters, a perennial crowd-pleaser.
Tequila
The Band's repertoire includes dozens of other songs, principally featuring classic rock and, more recently, '90s hits.


[edit] The Princeton University Band Song
The lyrics to the band's theme song:

Oh here we are, the Princeton Band,
Playing songs of Old Nassau.
That old refrain will sound again,
And you will hear the tiger roar!
The slide trombone, the saxophone,
And the bass drum sounding grand!
With a boom, boom, boom!
And a zoom, zoom, zoom!
Oh, when you hear the Princeton Band!

[edit] Trivia
The PUB has an ongoing presence in, of all media outlets, Sports Illustrated. Among the highlights:
The PUB appeared on the cover of the October 17, 1955 issue. This was the first time any Ivy League students appeared on the cover.[1]
After Princeton's stunning knockout of the UCLA men's basketball team in the 1996 NCAA tournament, SI wrote "If there really is a hoop heaven, the house band would be Princeton's, troubadours in straw hats who played the theme from "Underdog" late in the Tigers' victory."
More recently the PUB was cited in the on-line version of SI. Paul Zimmerman, in his column of February 26, 2004, claimed "for years, the fastest rendition [of the Star-Spangled Banner] I regularly clocked was that of the Princeton band. Always around 53 seconds."[2]
The Band won ESPN's Battle of the Marching Bands in 1996. The other competitors in this online poll were: Rice, Wisconsin, Ohio State, Grambling, Michigan, Stanford, and Texas A&M. It is suspected, though unconfirmed, that the Band won partly due to very strong voting in their favor by bands previously eliminated who did not want any of their rival bands to win. None of Princeton's rival bands were in the competition, therefore the PUB was something of a neutral choice.
The Band has been banned from Lafayette College due to an irreverent comedy show of which the administration did not approve.
The Band was also banned from playing at West Point in 1981 because it was not considered to be appropriate entertainment. The Band accepted the offer to attend the game and play in the stands, but did not show up. Instead, the Band organized a touch football game at its practice field, listened to the game on the radio and performed its halftime show. The following year, when West Point played at Princeton, the Band ended its halftime show with a tongue-in-cheek version of "Duty, Honor, Country," a musical adaptation of an address by General of the Army Douglas MacArthur to the cadets of West Point and marched off the field with corncob pipes.[3]
The Band has been on national television playing for the Princeton University basketball team at the NCAA tournament. In 2004, they traveled to Denver to watch the Princeton Tigers take on the Texas Longhorns.
For the 2005 P-Rade at Princeton's Reunions, the weather was threatening to downpour for the first several hours of the festivities. Just as the graduating Class of 2005 was joining the procession, a severe thunderstorm entered the area, soaking eveybody in attendance. Undeterred by the weather, however, the Band led the senior class on to the traditional parade-ending sprint across Poe Field.
Later the same day, the traditional evening orchestra concert celebrating the close of Reunions was cancelled due to the weather, though by the time of the concert itself the storm had long since cleared the area. Never to let an audience go to waste, a small group of band members who had come to watch the concert grabbed instruments and music and assembled to entertain the crowd until the fireworks display an hour later.
During the 1967 Harvard game, nationally televised on ABC, the Band intentionally spelled out the letters NBC. The network was not amused.[4]
The Band is also known to play Guns N' Roses "Welcome to the Jungle" before every home basketball game
When the Princeton football team wins a home game, the Band traditionally performs a concert




so there really could be dead yankees when it's all overxthumbsupx

DFW HOYA
September 16th, 2008, 02:16 PM
Did you invite the Princeton Band? If you did, there will be lots of fun. They have been banned from West Point since the 1980's.

Ivy League bands use "satire' as an excuse for being not very good.

All except for Cornell, of course.

Go...gate
September 16th, 2008, 02:50 PM
They have been kinda smart-aleck over the years. I attended the 1967 game when they spelled out "NBC" during halftime of the ABC telecast.

pete4256
September 16th, 2008, 03:04 PM
I TRULY HOPE THERE ARE NO INCIDENTS BETWEEN THE SOUTH CAROLINA CORPS OF CADETS AND PRINCETON STUDENTS OVER THE WAR IN IRAQ..

COULDN'T JUST SAY THE WAR.....THAT TERM IS HOW WE REFER TO THE LATE UNPLEASANTNESS

I'm unable to share your juvenile nostalgia for a conflict which killed 2.5 million Americans, including ancestors on both sides of my family. Your BS offends me.

citdog
September 16th, 2008, 03:06 PM
I'm unable to share your juvenile nostalgia for a conflict which killed 2.5 million Americans, including ancestors on both sides of my family. Your BS offends me.

and i really don't give two ****s eaglet! i am only sorry that we didn't get to kill all your ancestors who wore the blue suit.....hard to shoot yankee scum when all they show is their backs.

pete4256
September 16th, 2008, 03:27 PM
and i really don't give two ****s eaglet! i am only sorry that we didn't get to kill all your ancestors who wore the blue suit.....hard to shoot yankee scum when all they show is their backs.

By both sides, I meant my paternal ancestors, most of whom served in Longstreet's Corps in the Army of Northern Virginia, and my maternal ancestors, of whom my great-great grandfather died of a dysentery while being held as a p.o.w. by the Federals. His death was unverified until the 1880s, so I assume he's buried somewhere in an unmarked grave in Florida.

If you're stupid enough to think such human tragedy is funny, then I'm not going to change your mind.

citdog
September 16th, 2008, 03:45 PM
By both sides, I meant my paternal ancestors, most of whom served in Longstreet's Corps in the Army of Northern Virginia, and my maternal ancestors, of whom my great-great grandfather died of a dysentery while being held as a p.o.w. by the YANKEE SCUM His death was unverified until the 1880s, so I assume he's buried somewhere in an unmarked grave in Florida.

If you're stupid enough to think such human tragedy is funny, then I'm not going to change your mind.

IMPROVED...

the only tragedy is that "The Side of the Right" was denied the victory. I DO NOT WEEP FOR THE 300,000 YANKEES WE KILLED....I WISH IT WERE 3,000,000

YaleFootballFan
September 16th, 2008, 06:40 PM
The Citadel and Princeton are indeed making history in the world of Ivy football as well as the SoCon. It will be the first time in decades (since the Ivy League formed) that an Ivy team will play a team from the South.

I believe the last time an Ivy team traveled this far south was in 1993 when Yale nearly upset CENTRAL FLORIDA on their home turf.

Cleets
September 16th, 2008, 06:59 PM
It's just a football game... xeyebrowx I don't really think it reflects a North vs. South situation... or am I missing something..?



xbowx

CID1990
September 16th, 2008, 08:16 PM
I have to be at the Charleston Scottish Games and will miss the bloodletting.

It is possible that I will go to the game in Princeton next year.

Franks Tanks
September 16th, 2008, 09:29 PM
I have to be at the Charleston Scottish Games and will miss the bloodletting.

It is possible that I will go to the game in Princeton next year.

http://blog.thinkplaid.com/uploaded_images/fat-bastard-767785.jpg


Archive Picture of last year at the games.

Harvard Worship
September 16th, 2008, 11:14 PM
It's just a football game... xeyebrowx I don't really think it reflects a North vs. South situation... or am I missing something..?



xbowx

I think citdog is just trying to pump himself up for the game... and probably not trying to trivialize a traumatic chapter in American history.

I hope it's an exciting game!

TheValleyRaider
September 16th, 2008, 11:23 PM
Careful, citdog! Princeton is by far the Ivy school of choice for refined suthun genmin!xpeacex

John C. Calhoun went to Yale xreadx

Not saying, just saying...


Did you invite the Princeton Band? If you did, there will be lots of fun. They have been banned from West Point since the 1980's.

They are certainly friendly, though could easily rub someone the wrong way, especially at a military school. They certainly appear to have earned their bannings over the years


Ivy League bands use "satire' as an excuse for being not very good.

All except for Cornell, of course.

They Ivy bands are certainly an acquired taste, though some are more easily acquired than others (*coughcough*Yale*cough*)

Just because Cornell calls themselves a real marching band doesn't make them any good xcoolx

ngineer
September 16th, 2008, 11:26 PM
Really looking forward to this game, as we play Princeton the following week. Anyone know if it will be available by either school's website through video streaming??

PTW16
September 17th, 2008, 07:12 AM
Really looking forward to this game, as we play Princeton the following week. Anyone know if it will be available by either school's website through video streaming??

The Citadel videostreams all of their home football games at CitadelSports.com on Bulldog Insider. Subscription is required but the GameDay passes are very reasonable. It is a pretty good production too.

citdog
September 17th, 2008, 10:22 AM
does princeton have any fans or a message board.....

bonarae
September 17th, 2008, 10:54 PM
does princeton have any fans or a message board.....

Only on the Voy board, AFAIK.