You are here: 蜜桃直播 Student Affairs News AU and the Talk of Tradition

Student Life

AU and the Talk of Tradition

By |

Archival: Freshmen wearing beanie caps while on the quad. This used to be an old AU tradition.

Past Tense

Decades deep in the archives of AU鈥檚 student newspaper, The Eagle, a brief editorial holds a message that still rings true with today鈥檚 campus body.

It reads, 鈥淔or a school that has been established as long as has The 蜜桃直播, we have surprisingly few traditions that are peculiar to our school. Yes,鈥 it continues, 鈥渢here are annual dances and athletic contests, but these are not quite the same as ceremonies that are remembered by alumni of most American schools.鈥

Tradition. It鈥檚 a hot word of sorts at AU, an institution that has roots back in the 19th century, when it was charted by the United States Congress.

University Archivist Susan McElrath knows the topic well. She discovered the 1960 Eagle piece and holds her yearly 鈥淢ining the Archives鈥 presentation to outline the various traditions that have appeared at American.

鈥淎s long ago as fifty years, AU students were already complaining that traditions didn鈥檛 happen on this campus. So, obviously, this is not a new problem,鈥 she explains.

Even with a storied history that features presidential visits and yearly events in Artemas Ward Week, the Freshmen Service Experience, and the Founders鈥 Day Ball, there is a sense that tradition doesn鈥檛 exist on AU soil.

Many point to an absent football team or a student body focused on internships off campus, but the culprit could be as simple as a lasting notion, an idea shared through generations.

Present Voice

Kyle Contrata, a senior in the School of International Service, echoes The Eagle鈥檚 鈥減eculiar鈥 words in today鈥檚 language.

鈥淚n terms of the lifespan of AU,鈥 he says, 鈥渋t鈥檚 kind of strange that we haven鈥檛 gotten any traditions yet.鈥

He agrees with the current campus consensus on the matter but sees a university united in its efforts to change.

鈥淲e haven鈥檛 quite found a niche for these kinds of things,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ut I think the campus and the administration in the last few years have really been working to raise this kind of school spirit and spirit of tradition.鈥

Contrata is right to notice the attempts both by students and administrators. Student Government has dedicated its efforts this year to highlighting history and tradition by revamping Artie Ward Week and Founders鈥 Week with concerts, programs, and major speakers.

The Office of Campus Life is set to debut a new web communications strategy meant to emphasize AU history and its connection to the present. 鈥淭his Moment in Campus Life History鈥 articles will appear online each month.

Even McElrath, in her 鈥淢ining the Archives鈥 presentation, makes the case for real AU traditions, whether they have continued or not. She outlines the seasonal crowning of spring and winter queens that died out in decades past along with the heavy hazing of freshmen, in which first-years were required to wear beanies, signs displaying their personal information, and pants rolled up six inches from the ground.

鈥淎s generations move on, new generations come in,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd they鈥檙e not interested in things their parents and grandparents were interested in. That makes some traditions kind of quaint but not something people would really want to do. It makes having traditions kind of hard.鈥

Shared Experience

While Student Government and the university administration do their best to build AU tradition and spirit through events like Artie Ward Week, Founders鈥 Week, and an online presence, senior Kyle Contrata doesn鈥檛 feel he鈥檚 missed out on anything in his three years at American. He may believe tradition is scarce, but he doesn鈥檛 seem to mind.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 affected my student experience in the least,鈥 he explains. 鈥淚鈥檝e had a fantastic time here at American. In terms of truly getting what I wanted out of university life, I think I have everything 鈥 good experiences and good relationships. I think AU can offer the really important things that people need.鈥

It鈥檚 hard to ignore that AU has traditions, from its 21 years of the Freshmen Service Experience to the Founders鈥 Day Ball, which was established in 1931. In the end, though, the perceived lack of tradition may be itself a tradition peculiar to AU. It鈥檚 one that brings students and administration together to look for an answer, and in looking, they find a common experience with the past.


If you鈥檙e interested in reading the original 1960 clipping from The Eagle, click .


Follow the Office of Campus Life and receive its news and history stories: .