Penn 1970
Princeton at Penn
October 24th, 1970
Princeton wins 22 -16
Ladies and gentlemen, in view of the upcoming elections we ask you to join the Princeton University Band in a long, hard look at politics.
“Princeton Forward”
The Band first salutes the moral leadership of the Senate in rejecting the report of the Commission on Pornography. The Band notes that our legislators evidently feel that they have the situation well in hand in their rigid opposition to the permissive sexual attitudes spreading throughout the country. This opposition lately has found expression in stiffer punishments for sex criminals: a departure from the philosophy of “Spare the rod; spoil the child.” The Band, however, cannot understand the continued opposition to the study of sex and marriage in the schools. Indeed, we are forced to conclude that in the eyes of many people, “Love Is Blue”
(Band forms a blob)
That pernicious purveyor of pedagoguery, the Princeton Band, would like to propose its annual salute to that peerless pinnacle of profuse pedantry, our verbally vexating Vice President, Spiro T. Agnew. Forming
a) Roget’s Thesaurus
b) a repetitious redundant, or
c) a licentious lexicon of literary liberalism,
The Band facetiously faces one of erudite Spiro’s effervescent elucidations of forensix flatulence.
“Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious” (Band forms square with line down the center)
(The Band performed this show at both Penn and Brown in 1970.)
October 24th, 1970
Princeton wins 22 -16
Ladies and gentlemen, in view of the upcoming elections we ask you to join the Princeton University Band in a long, hard look at politics.
“Princeton Forward”
The Band first salutes the moral leadership of the Senate in rejecting the report of the Commission on Pornography. The Band notes that our legislators evidently feel that they have the situation well in hand in their rigid opposition to the permissive sexual attitudes spreading throughout the country. This opposition lately has found expression in stiffer punishments for sex criminals: a departure from the philosophy of “Spare the rod; spoil the child.” The Band, however, cannot understand the continued opposition to the study of sex and marriage in the schools. Indeed, we are forced to conclude that in the eyes of many people, “Love Is Blue”
(Band forms a blob)
That pernicious purveyor of pedagoguery, the Princeton Band, would like to propose its annual salute to that peerless pinnacle of profuse pedantry, our verbally vexating Vice President, Spiro T. Agnew. Forming
a) Roget’s Thesaurus
b) a repetitious redundant, or
c) a licentious lexicon of literary liberalism,
The Band facetiously faces one of erudite Spiro’s effervescent elucidations of forensix flatulence.
“Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious” (Band forms square with line down the center)
(The Band performed this show at both Penn and Brown in 1970.)