In Review

Know the Answers?
Share your story in an email to rochrev@rochester.edu. Please put 鈥淎sk the Archivist鈥 in the subject line.
We鈥檙e the Class of . . . !

At last May鈥檚 commencement ceremony for Arts, Sciences & Engineering, Board of Trustees Chair Ed Hajim 鈥58 boasted, 鈥淏etter than good, better than great, we鈥檙e the Class of Fifty-Eight!鈥
A few minutes later Senior Class Council President Mehr Kashyap 鈥15 replied: 鈥淣ot just one 鈥橨acket, we鈥檙e the whole hive! Feel the sting of Twenty-One-Five!鈥
While some in the audience on the Eastman Quadrangle may not have known it, these were two class 鈥測ells,鈥 a tradition designed to encourage class spirit that stretches back to 1885. You can find a list at the website: rbscp.lib.rochester.edu/yells.
But the records are silent for many years. Do you remember your class yell? Let us hear it!
Do you remember 鈥楻ex鈥? And can you sing it?
James Speegle 鈥60, 鈥61 (MA), the son of coach Roman (Speed) Speegle, sent me the words to his father鈥檚 memorable song 鈥淩ex, the Piddling Pup,鈥 but we have no record of the tune. The lyrics are posted here: livinghistory.lib.rochester.edu/speegle. There鈥檚 also an audio recording of the first dedication of the Speegle Pool in 1977 in what is now the Goergen Athletic Center, and a letter that Coach Speegle wrote to Rochester students serving in World War II (look for his reference to guitar-playing).
If you remember the tune to 鈥淩ex,鈥 send an email, or a singing telegram. And you can share your own memories of Coach Speegle singing, swimming, and coaching in the comments section on the webpage at livinghistory.lib.rochester.edu/speegle.
A fraternity mug for Jane?
While food is discouraged in Special Collections, the University Archives hold a large collection of dinnerware, from Wedgewood dinner plates with campus buildings emblazoned on them鈥攃reated in 1951 to stock the pantries of loyal sons and daughters of Rochester鈥攖o Boar鈥檚 Head Dinner commemorative glasses.
There are also fraternity and sorority ceramic mugs, each with the crest of a Greek group painted on one side and a name on the other. We were recently contacted about a 1977 Theta Chi mug, with 鈥淛ane鈥 as the imprinted name. Since Theta Chi is a fraternity, is this a nickname or a girlfriend鈥檚 name?
Chi Rho, Chi Rho, It鈥檚 Off to School We Go!
Chi Rho began in 1909 as a sophomore honorary group, with members selected at the end of their freshman year. It took as its logo an Egyptian-style mask, and the identities of the new recruits were concealed by the names of Egyptian kings (Ramses, Ptolemy, Necho, and so forth). Only after the selection of new members were the old ones revealed; later, Dandelion Day became the occasion for the (literal) unmasking.
Why 鈥淐hi Rho鈥? Members of the Class of 1909 had their Greek instruction from Professor Ryland Morris Kendrick, himself a member of the Class of 1889, and son of Professor Asahel Clark Kendrick. The Greek letters do have a Christian symbolism, but perhaps they were intended to signify the word chrestos which can be translated as 鈥渒ind鈥 or 鈥済ood鈥濃攁 sophomoric aspiration to Meliora?
The group was charged with promoting good fellowship, ensuring that freshmen learned 鈥淭he Genesee鈥 and other school songs, and with spreading the 鈥淩ochester Hello鈥 spirit. But it did not always live up to its good name, and the words Chi Rho 鈥渟truck terror鈥 in the hearts of 鈥渢respassing鈥 (walking on the Quad instead of using the tunnels) frosh.
An ever-better revival of the group occurred in spring 2015, with a dozen rising sophomores once again charged with sharing University traditions and history.
Were you in Chi Rho? If your memories are not too hazy, send them in to teach a new generation about University traditions.