Category Archives: traditions

Carry Me Back

"Carry Me Back" alma mater song

Although the hoopla surrounding graduation and the end of the term are behind us, we’re still basking in some intense school spirit, humming, and getting carried back…

“Carry me Back,” the 1917 alma mater of Oregon Agricultural College, was written by W. Homer Maris while he was a graduate student at OAC and a member of a popular campus male quartet. The song was first presented publicly by the quartet at a general convocation of students and faculty. Maris earned a graduate degree from OAC in 1918, and died in a tragic bicycle/automobile accident in Tacoma in 1933. His brother, Paul V. Maris, was director of the OAC Extension Service from 1920-1934. His wife, Buena Margason Maris, later served as Dean of Women at OSC from 1941-1948.

Maris’ alma mater also enjoyed a longstanding tradition of being sung after every football game to the band’s accompaniment — no leaving early to avoid the crowd! The tradition has had its fair share of declines and revivals… Today, the tradition has been partially revived and the band, regardless of victory or defeat, solemnly plays the Alma Mater after each game, although only a handful of fans remain to hear it played.

So stick around or take a listen!

During the 20th century, spirit at Oregon State went through a lot of change as many traditions have come and gone. Some of the traditions have involved athletics, while others have simply embraced our alma mater. Enjoy your daily sampling of some of guest blogger Ben Forgard’s favorites!

School Traditions at OSU #5

The AWS Carnival in the 1940s. (P017:1894)

The AWS Carnival in the 1940s. (P017:1894)

“Junior Weekend”

Also known briefly as “Campus Weekend,” Junior Weekend was one of the largest events of the year. Originally organized by the junior class, the weekend was held at the end of each May. It celebrated the advancement of class status during the Burning of the Green, and also featured the “Rook-Soph Tug-of-War” in which the freshman and sophomore classes would complete in the classic contest held over either side of a muddy creek. One of the highlights of the weekend was a preview of The Beaver, the yearbook put together by the junior class. By 1940 the AWS carnival merged with the weekend before being renamed as the Junior Carnival, a popular attraction as late as the 1970s.

During the 20th century, spirit at Oregon State went through a lot of change as many traditions have come and gone. Some of the traditions have involved athletics, while others have simply embraced our alma mater. Enjoy your daily sampling of some of guest blogger Ben Forgard’s favorites!

School Traditions at OSU #4

Hello Walk, image courtesy of Google Maps

Hello Walk, image courtesy of Google Maps

“The Hello Walk”

As late as World War II, the “Hello Walk” encouraged a friendly greeting among students in the MU Quad. Originally along the diagonal between Kidder Hall and the Dairy Building (today called Fairbanks and Gilkey Halls), anyone walking along the path was expected to offer friendly greetings in any encounters, whether friend or stranger. The Barometer even reported that President Kerr particularly liked to start his mornings along the walk as a way to interact with students and faculty. In 1943, with a few veterans beginning to appear on campus, the tradition started to wane as co-eds worried that their greetings might be too forward and improper.

During the 20th century, spirit at Oregon State went through a lot of change as many traditions have come and gone. Some of the traditions have involved athletics, while others have simply embraced our alma mater. Enjoy your daily sampling of some of guest blogger Ben Forgard’s favorites!

School Traditions at OSU #3

Burning of the Green, circa 1960

Burning of the Green, circa 1960

“The Rook Green”

Beginning in the early 1900s, all freshman used to be required to wear the “rook green.” Men had rook “lids” (small green caps) while women wore green ribbons in their hair. Until the early 1930s, cadets also wore a green armband while in uniform. The green was worn during the weekdays and was useful for upperclassmen to identify any rooks in the area—rooks had several rules which, when violated, earned discipline carried out by the sophomore class. In the 1940s, the “rookess” ribbons were worn only on Wednesdays, and in 1960, the rook lids also switched to only Wednesdays. In a rite of passage, the freshmen would burn their green—hence the name “Burning of the Green”—at the annual Junior Weekend held at the end of may, signifying their advancement into the sophomore class. By the 1960s, the Burning of the Green had moved to Homecoming in the fall.

During the 20th century, spirit at Oregon State went through a lot of change as many traditions have come and gone. Some of the traditions have involved athletics, while others have simply embraced our alma mater. Enjoy your daily sampling of some of guest blogger Ben Forgard’s favorites!

School Traditions at OSU #2

Grooves: carving up a tabletop

Grooves: carving up a tabletop

Have you ever heard the story of the “Senior Tabletops”?

Starting in 1915, the seniors carved their names and other designs on the top of the “senior table” at a popular restaurant in town. Each year the restaurant furnished a new tabletop, while the old ones were stored at “the co-op building,” and later, the MU basement. The tabletops were put on display in the MU in 1932 as a way to revive interest in the waning tradition, but apart from brief revivals in the 1950s and 1960s, the movement was unsuccessful. The tabletops were displayed in Gill Coliseum in the 1950s before moving to the newly remodeled McAlexander Fieldhouse in 1984.

During the 20th century, spirit at Oregon State went through a lot of change as many traditions have come and gone. Some of the traditions have involved athletics, while others have simply embraced our alma mater. Enjoy your daily sampling of some of guest blogger Ben Forgard’s favorites!

 

School Traditions at OSU #1


Fire in downtown corvallis, 1930

Fire in downtown corvallis, 1930

No Smoking!

In 1890, faculty at the State Agricultural College (now OSU) worried about an alarming habit gaining in popularity relating to dried leaves of “Nicotiana Tabacuni,” formally banned smoking from campus. Although technically more of a rule than a tradition, it was often fondly recalled as a valuable tradition. As class structure (graduation class, not social class) altered during and after World War II (some “Rooks” were not 18 and fresh out of highschool, but in many cases were older than upperclassmen, and had war-time experience), the rule relaxed, first with designated smoking areas in 1944, and then further in 1947 when the ban was lifted after a student vote. By the mid-1960s, there were even ashtrays located throughout the MU. Despite the changes, smoking has never been allowed in the classroom.

During the 20th century, spirit at Oregon State went through a lot of change as many traditions have come and gone. Some of the traditions have involved athletics, while others have simply embraced our alma mater. Enjoy your daily sampling of some of guest blogger Ben Forgard’s favorites!