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Old Nassau
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Old Nassau : ウィキペディア英語版
Old Nassau

"Old Nassau" has been Princeton University's alma mater since 1859. Harlan Page Peck was the lyricist and Carl A. Langlotz (sometimes Karl Langlotz) was the composer. The lyrics were changed in 1987 to address sexism at the newly co-educational institution. For a brief time the song was sung to the melody of "Auld Lang Syne" before Langlotz wrote the music on demand. The lyrics were the result of a songwriting contest by the ''Nassau Literary Review''.
==Composition==
Freshman student Peck penned the words that year and published it in the March 1859 issue of the ''Nassau Literary Review'', which is the oldest student publication at Princeton and also the second oldest undergraduate literary magazine in the country.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=About: What Is The Nassau Literary Review? )〕 The winter 1858–59 issue of the magazine had offered a prize for a college song and Peck won.〔 Peck would go on to pen both the Class of 1862 ode and the Class of 1862 poem.〔 Later in Spring 1859,〔 German teacher Langlotz composed music for the song.〔 The song has four verses of lyrics and a refrain.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Old Nassau's Lyrical Change )
The lyrics were originally sung to the melody of "Auld Lang Syne", but William C. Stitt (Class of 1857), a student at the Princeton Theological Seminary found this arrangement unsuitable. He sought out Langlotz and stood over him until he composed more suitable music. The song and its lyrics then appeared in ''Songs of Old Nassau'', the first Princeton songbook, Spring 1859.
According to Langlotz' autobiography

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