This photo really intrigues me! In all of my RPI history travels, which includes extensive research for exhibits on student clubs and student traditions, I haven’t found an explanation for this image. I hope I stumble across something someday that will help me identify this curiously dressed group of men! I’m [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Rensselaer’
Mystery Image #5 – create a caption
Posted in RPI Trivia, unidentified photographs, tagged college history, costumes, mystery image, Rensselaer, RPI, RPI history, student clubs, student traditions on May 16, 2008 | 8 Comments »
this week in May
Posted in RPI Trivia, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute History, tagged commencement speakers, May 1970, National Student Strike, Rensselaer, RPI, RPI students, sit in, war protest on May 9, 2008 | Leave a Comment »
Finals week is coming to an end and from my vantage point (limited as it may be), it has been very quiet on campus this week. It definitely feels like the semester is winding down. On the job I often live in the past and today I wondered how very different [...]
100 years ago
Posted in Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute History, tagged centennial, Rensselaer, RPI campus, RPI history, Russell Sage Laboratory, Sage Lab on April 9, 2008 | Leave a Comment »
There are several centennials to mark this year at RPI so I’ve been doing a lot of research in the period 1907 to 1909. I just installed a new exhibit in the Folsom Library titled Russell Sage Laboratory 100 Years: A Glance Back at the Beginning. One hundred years ago this month, ground [...]
The Tute Screw
Posted in RPI Trivia, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute History, tagged fraternities, freshmen, Rensselaer, RPI, Sigma Phi Epsilon, student traditions, students, Tute Screw on March 4, 2008 | 7 Comments »
Every RPI student and alum has invariably heard the term ‘Tute Screw; often used metaphorically and also embodied as an actual object. No one knows who coined the term or how long it has been in use, but the object itself has a documented origin. In the Fall of 1949, Sigma Phi Epsilon [...]