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Hey
Day
The Honor Men Awards
Four
"Honor Men Awards" are presented at each Hey Day celebration: the Spoon,
Bowl, Cane and Spade. The recipients of each award are elected by the senior class
based on their achievements and contributions to class life, which distinguished
them as being the outstanding men in their class. In an enhancement of the Hey
Day tradition, the winners of twenty-five years standing generally present the
Senior Honor Awards.
The
Spoon
The oldest of the awards is the Spoon, which originated in
the mid-19th century. In the early 1860s, when the University was located on Ninth
Street, the school year was divided into trimesters, with first trimester marks
announced right before Christmas recess. Although there were few "first honor"
or "second honor" men, there were usually many holding "third honors".
In 1861, several joyous sophomores, imbued with the holiday spirit, presented
the lowest freshman in the "third honor" group with a large wooden spoon.
The spoon was engraved with a sarcastic inscription in Latin. Four years later,
at the first Class Day, a spoon was presented to the most popular member of the
senior class, who thereby became the "Spoon Man". For the first fifty years, the spoons were carved by master carver and furniture-maker Daniel Pabst.
The
Bowl
The
Bowl is the second oldest award, dating to 1882. Initially, a replica of the bowl
was presented to one of the popular sophomores at the end of the Bowl
Fight. By1884, however, the presentation of the Bowl on Class Day was fixed
as the second Senior Award.
The
Cane
The Cane Award was introduced to commemorate the Cane Fights,
which began in 1890 and only lasted five years. The first presentation of the
Cane as the third Senior Award took place in 1891. The origin of the Cane Fights
is interesting. In the 1880s, when the cane was the hallmark of every young gentleman,
the sophomores were infuriated that the lowly freshmen were allowed to carry canes.
They decided to take the law into their own hands by seizing the freshmen's canes
and breaking them in half. After several years, the classes decided to formalize
the custom by holding a cane fight. In these fights, the cane man dropped a cane
in the middle of a field and both classes rushed toward it. After a specified
time, the hands on the cane were counted and the winning class declared. At the
Hey Day celebration, the Cane Award was presented to the third most popular senior.
The Spade
The final Senior Honor Award
is the Spade. The first presentation of the Spade as the fourth Senior Award took
place in 1894. This ceremony formalized a custom which had grown since the inception
of Ivy Day in 1873. Each year the student who used a spade to plant the class
ivy was allowed to keep the tool as an expression of his classmates' esteem.
Other
Awards
In addition to the Senior Honor Awards, many other awards
and citations were given on Hey Day. These awards were presented to individuals
and fraternities which had achieved distinction in leadership, ability, integrity
and perseverance. Following the presentation of awards was the announcement of
elections to membership in senior honor societies.
This exhibit was created in January 2005 by Irina Kalashnikova, C '06
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