-Caveat Lector-

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Continuing traditions: Old Blue meets new | Sum…</A>
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Continuing traditions: Old Blue meets new

By Molly Ball and Emily Bell
At a school that is almost 300 years old, traditions are a significant force
in students' lives. But a tradition is just a ritual that has stood the test
of time; traditions can be silly or serious, but they're not indelible.
Yale's traditions are our foundation, yet they are constantly shifting as old
ones die out and new ones are formed.

Fresh in the minds of Yale's current undergraduates is the example of Naples
Pizzeria. A famed "traditional" eatery on Wall Street, Naples features walls
of Yale paraphernalia, cheap beer, greasy pizza, and a dance floor. For
years, Yalies flocked there every Thursday night, but in the middle of last
year, a new club called Gecko opened on Crown St. Featuring two bars, pool
tables, and a bigger, flashier dance floor, the new establishment quickly
usurped Naples's place as the premier Thursday night hangout. Now, students
head to Gecko, leaving Naples practically deserted on weekends.

A more serious tradition changed dramatically in 1969, when women were first
admitted to Yale. Today, the Women's Table fountain, designed by Maya Lin, SY
'81, ARCH '86, attests to the speed with which Yale made up for lost time.
Inscribed on its black granite surface are the number of women at Yale each
year, starting with zero in 1701 and ending when the table was built in 1993.
(The class of 1999 is the first undergraduate class with more women than
men.)Yale now has a Women's Center, women's singing groups, and even
all-female secret societies.

Yale's buildings embody the conflict between New and Old Blue. When Morse and
Stiles were erected in the early 1960s, the modern, concrete-molded buildings
caused a stir. Certainly, the peanut brittle structures with no right angles
broke with Yale's established tradition of Gothic and Georgian architecture.
But today, Yale has embraced these colleges, along with the similarly bold
Art and Architecture building and Beinecke Plaza, as dimensions of the
University's innovative spirit.

Indeed, Eli spirit is what creates traditions and what keeps them alive. Even
when the Yale Precision Marching Band stopped playing "The Stripper,"
Saybrugians refused to give up their time-hallowed tradition of shedding
their garments at home football games.

Inter-college rivalries also demonstrate the ever-changing nature of Yale
traditions. While the Silliman-Timothy Dwight competition is as fierce and
entrenched as that between the Yankees and Mets, other battles erupt yearly.
For example, just this year, tension between Davenport and Jonathan Edwards
exploded. After a daring squad of DC patriots absconded with JE's engraved
library plaque, a black-clad JE SWAT team retaliated by stealing the
venerated DC courtyard gnome.

You're never too new to make your mark. It was only September of his freshman
year when Armando Valdez, BK '01, ran off with the coveted Doodle record by
scarfing down 22 burgers in one sitting. When a high schooler tried to steal
Valdez's glory, the freshman responded just weeks later, reclaiming the
Doodle throne with 24.

But does every freshman have to eat a sickening amount of beef to be a part
of Yale tradition? Of course not. We are all part of Yale tradition, and we
all have the power to make new traditions take root. Just as the few brave
women who came to Yale in 1969 opened a new chapter in the school's history,
minority students today struggle to gain recognition of their heritages. This
past year, a petition to offer Hindi and Thai at Yale was evidence of the
continuing effort to add an Eastern flavor to the traditionally Western
curriculum.

Every time you take off your shirt for Saybrook or choose Gecko over Naples
on a Thursday night, Yale traditions, old and new, come to life. And it
doesn't end there; every Yalie has the power to start a new undergraduate
organization, or, like "Richfest" founder Rich Marshall, SM '96, an annual
college carnival. Yalies in every class and every decade make a unique
contribution to the traditions amassed by the generations of students that
have gone before us.
Ariel Pepple contributed to this article.
Back to Something Blue...

------------------------------------------------------------------------
All materials © 1998 The Yale Herald, Inc., and its staff.

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