Tag Archives: FA21

Dark Side/Light Side (Harry Grigorian)

Title: Dark Side/ Light Side

General Information:

         Verbal Lore, Slang

         Language: English

         Country of Origin: United States

         Informant: JS

         Date Collected: 11/2/2021

         Location Collected: Dorm Room

Informant Data: JS is a member of the Class of 2023 at Dartmouth. He is from Providence, Rhode Island and rows on the Varsity Men’s Lightweight Crew Team. JS is a Government major and enjoys spending time with his dog and riding his bike.

Contextual Data:

Social Context: These are among the two most commonly used phrases at Dartmouth. Student can use them in person or over text, and they are ubiquitous in all class years and across campus. Its usage certainly spikes around meal times as student plan where to meet friends.

Cultural Context: As there is only one dining hall, students are very familiar with it. It does have two separate eating areas, and one is lighter with white paint and tables while one is darker with brown paint and tables. Students coordinate where they want to sit by texting their friends before a meal asking if they are going light or dark side. It has a neutral connotation.

Item: Dark and Light Side; the two eating areas at Foco, one of which is darker and one of which is lighter. Example: I was sitting at Dark Side, but it was too depressing today so I moved to Light Side.

Quotes from Informant: “In foco,” these two terms describe “two places you can at in Foco on opposite sides of the building.” In a phrase, he could say “I would prefer to eat on dark side over light side today.” He learned this phrase “freshman fall, right at the start of school from a person who had already been here.” “All of Dartmouth knows dark side vs light side.” This slang came to be “because it’s a description of a place and dark side is a lot darker. It’s much easier to describe.”

Informant’s Comments: Everyone on campus knows this word and uses it frequently. Sports teams eat on Dark Side usually, especially JS’s crew team. “It’s nice because whole teams can sit together at the longer tables and not have to split up,” JS said.

Collector’s Comments: This slang feels very unique to Dartmouth. As we are all so familiar with Foco, it is cool that we can create slang (Dark and Light Side) within other slang (Foco). That’s pretty cool!

Collector’s Name: Harry Grigorian

Need ___

General Information:

         Verbal Lore, Slang

         Language: English

         Country of Origin: United States

         Informant: CR ’23

         Date Collected: 11/4/2021

         Location Collected: New Hamp Dorm Room

Informant Data: CR is a ’23 from Orinda, California. He is 20 years old, and a philosophy and environmental science double major. On campus he plays club soccer.

Contextual Data:

Social Context: The phrase “need ___” is used when asking people to do an activity with you. It is most frequently used in group chats, often in large group chats for clubs or greek organizations. Common uses of “need” are when people want to play pong, get a meal, or go somewhere off campus. It is often texted out, and then people will respond in a specific manner to indicate that they are interested.

Cultural Context: Dartmouth students have a unique way of talking, and like to shorten and simplify words. The phrase “need” is a simple, efficient way of asking people to do something and saying how many people are needed. This phrase is especially useful for pong, a game that is fairly unique to Dartmouth. It has a fairly neutral connotation.

Item: “Need ___”: Need is a way to express that you want people to do something with you, so you say need followed by the number of people needed and the activity you want to do. Example: “Need 3 for pong”

Associated File: Notable quotes

“Need is an easy text to send when you need a certain number of people to do something with you.”

“I mostly use ‘need’ when I want to play pong, and I usually text out in our fraternity group chat, as that is where I usually get the quickest responses.”

Informant’s Comments:  CR said he uses this word mostly for pong, although he mentioned that his freshman floor group chat used it a lot for meals and other activities. He also started using it more frequently once joining a fraternity.

Collector’s Comments: I started using this word a lot more once I joined a greek organization. It is an easy way to communicate to a large group of people and helps me find people to do activities with.

Collector’s Name: Ben Ryan

Warm Cut (Harry Grigorian)

General Information:

         Verbal Lore, Slang

         Language: English

         Country of Origin: United States

         Informant: AK

         Date Collected: 11/5/2021

         Location Collected: Dorm Room

Informant Data: AK is a member of the Class of 2023 at Dartmouth College. She is a Creative Writing major and Computer Science minor, and she rows for the Women’s Crew team. AK is from San Francisco, California, and enjoys running and hanging out with friends

Contextual Data:

Social Context: This slang is used typically when describing a route to get from one place to another. It is not usually used over text, but is said in person when two or more people are discussing. This phrase is used often among members of the women’s crew team, and is probably used more during cold weather.

Cultural Context: Hanover, especially in the winter, is extremely cold. Dartmouth also has many clusters of buildings that can impede travel. Therefore, in the cold, it makes sense for students to cut through buildings while moving around campus. Its connotation is neutral.

Item: Warm cut; an indoor travel route that avoids the cold weather outside. Example: Sorry I was a second late, I took a warm cut through Robinson Hall.

Quotes from Informant: The warm cut definition is “walking through a warm building you normally wouldn’t enter when it’s cold outside to stay warmer. An example is “I walk through the library on the way to class.” She learned it “Freshman year from a teammate who would beep us into her dorm as a warm cut.” She’s “not sure” who uses it, but “definitely [her] whole sports team.” She said it developed “Because it’s a spin on the word short cut but it’s warm.”

Informant’s Comments: AK said she likes this word because it is unique to Dartmouth students and fits the small campus nature. She learned this phrase freshman year.

Collector’s Comments: I know this word and also really like it. Hearing it now reminds me of the beautiful winter time. It is also a word that people outside of Dartmouth would not understand, so I enjoy the uniqueness. It is also definitely used by way more people than just her sports team. Probably the whole campus uses it.

Collector’s Name: Harry Grigorian

NARP

General Information:

         Verbal Lore, Slang

         Language: English

         Country of Origin: United States

         Informant: JC ’24

         Date Collected: 11/2/2021

         Location Collected: First Floor Baker Library

Informant Data: JC is a ’24 at Dartmouth College, and is a 21 year old male from Singapore. He is a sophomore at Dartmouth college, and is not an athlete. He is a Economics major.

Contextual Data:

Social Context: I collected this information and word from Jihwan on the first floor of Baker library. NARP is used to delineate a social divide on campus between athletes and non-athletes. It is often a key piece of information used to describe someone. It can cause divides in social settings such as greek life, as athletes tend to belong to certain fraternities and sororities and narps belong mostly to others.It can be used with both a negative or positive connotation, depending on the situation. Some people are very proud to be narps, while occasionally athletes look down on narps and use the word in a mean way.

Cultural Context: Dartmouth students often shorten words or phrases to make them easier to remember and create a more unique culture. Non-athlete is an awkward way to refer to someone, so the word NARP was created to make things easier. Given the unusually high percentage of Dartmouth students that are athletes, this term is useful when talking about people on campus.

Item: NARP (Non-Athletic Regular Person): Example: “Joe used to play on the soccer team but he quit, so now he is a narp.”

Associated File:

“NARP stands for non-athletic regular person, so its like anyone who’s not an athlete.”

“I learned it freshman year because a couple guys on my floor were athletes, and some older guys referred to other people on our floor using this word”.

Informant’s Comments: JC said he was asked if he was a narp fairly frequently during his first few weeks at Dartmouth. He also noted that the word fosters a sense of division between athletes and non-athletes that can be seen in various social situations.

Collector’s Comments: This term was created as an easy way to refer to non-athletes. It is an abbreviation and thus is more efficient and easy to remember. I don’t frequently use this word, but when I do I use the word to describe individuals or friend groups.

Collector’s Name: Ben Ryan

Colly P (Harry Grigorian)

General Information:

         Verbal Lore, Slang

         Language: English

         Country of Origin: United States

         Informant: GG

         Date Collected: 10/19/2021

         Location Collected: Dorm Room

Informant Data: GG is a graduate of Dartmouth College in the Class of 2017. She majored in Chemistry and was pre-med. She is from Bethesda, Maryland, and she is working as an assistant at a medical facility before going to medical school next year.

Contextual Data:

Social Context: This word developed around a friend group that GG was a part of during her later years at Dartmouth. The group used the word among themselves, and occassionally would mention it to others outside the group, even though those people sometimes did not understand the meaning. Scenarios under which the word might be used are over text message or in person.

Cultural Context: Dartmouth students frequently try to shorten longer phrases or expressions using shortened words. This is a common practice, and it can be applied to almost any existing word. She believes most people on campus have not heard of this slang, but may understand it if they hear it. The term is neutral.

Item: Colly P; Pasta from Collis Student Center. Example: You want to grab some Colly P after class?

Quotes from Informant: GG said “Colly P stands for Collis Pasta. I think only like three people say it,” she said, adding that “it’s very niche. I think one of my friend groups made it up.” She believes that “it encapsulates that Dartmouth loves creating shortcuts for things that don’t even need them. It’s like people just make them for fun and to add twists to normally mundane things.”

Informant’s Comments: GG said this was one of her favorite words that she used at Dartmouth. GG really like this word and still enjoys saying it after Dartmouth, even though no one knows what she is talking about.

Collector’s Comments: I had never heard of this word despite the fact that the informant is my sister. It seems a little unnecessary to shorten the already short “Collis Pasta,” but this slang shows how Dartmouth students will stop at nothing to save time.

Collector’s Name: Harry Grigorian

Dartmouth Slang

Collectors & Items Collected

Claire Azar: Blobby, Shmob, Fracket, Lines, Tails, Droco, Flitz, Class Year (’22, ’23, etc.), Trippees, Drillees

Dylan Bienstock: FFB, Flair, Sklodge

Harry Grigorian: Warm Cut, Dark Side/ Light Side, Colly P

Annie Revers: 3FB, Foco, Lou’s Challenge, Ledyard Challenge

Nathan Zhang: Blitz, BEMA, Bequest

Collin Kearns: Facetimey, Layup, The Fifty

Ben Ryan: NARP, Need, Good Sam

What are we collecting?

For our folklore collection project, we decided to investigate slang at Dartmouth. Whether it is acronyms for locations on campus or creative ways to refer to students or emails, Dartmouth students have a unique vocabulary. Slang is a pervasive part of campus culture and something students depend upon during their time here. Since slang is such an important part of daily life at Dartmouth, our group decided to take a poll of our friends, family members, teammates, and strangers in order to gain a better understanding of Dartmouth slang. While our informants come from diverse backgrounds and experiences, all are united by one common attribute: being past or present Dartmouth students.

What is the significance?

  • This project is significant because it offers an analysis of slang used by the Dartmouth community to signal belonging to a group. If you are not familiar with these terms it can become fairly obvious that you are not part of the Dartmouth community. This is why so many of these words are learned freshman year as the new class is assimilating to Dartmouth’s culture.
  • Slang allows us to easily communicate with one another and create a shared language 
  • This shared language: 
    • Allows students to connect members of their community (current students, professors, and alumni)
    • Provides Freshman an easier transition into Dartmouth by allowing them to feel quickly connected and a part of the community
  • This shared language is vital to everyday communication on Dartmouth campus and thus students often feel forced to participate in this shared experience or often feel left out if they are not aware of the culture terms

Questions we asked:

  • What is a phrase of Dartmouth slang that you have picked up?
  • Where/when do you think you first learned it?
  • What group knows/uses this word (a club? all of Dartmouth? members of a sports team?)?
  • Why do you think this slang came to be? Is it a shortened phrase, a description of a place, or something else?
  • Can you tell me anything else interesting about this slang?

Informants:

We collected from 23 informants for this project. To ensure that our sample of informants would help us achieve our goal of digging deeper into the origins and meanings of Dartmouth Slang, we chose students and alumni who we thought would be extremely involved on Dartmouth’s campus. We chose students from many different backgrounds and interest groups, so that we could get a variety of perspectives on Dartmouth Slang. Though, one thing that units all of our informants is that they were all once part of the folk group of Dartmouth students, and therefore are very acquainted with Dartmouth slang.

Informant Demographics:

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Overall observations from our collections:

  • Majority of terms were learned by people during their freshman year
  • Certain words are almost always learned on Trips, making trips serve as something of a facilitator for the language. 
    • Words like trippees obviously, but also basic words like layup or foco that are essential to becoming a Dartmouth student
  • Majority of other words are learned as students are exposed to new social situations
    • Biggest steps would be picking classes, going to the library, beginning to “go out”, and the frat ban ending
    • Words are learned in specific situations
      • For example, going to the library means you will learn FFB, while beginning to go to fraternities means you will learn words like lines and fracket

“HEPS-oween” run

General Information about Item:

  • Ritual
  • Language: English
  • Country of Origin: United States
  • Informant: SM
  • Date Collected: 10/20/21

Informant Data:

  • SM is a Dartmouth class of 2021 who is currently in his fifth year at Dartmouth. He has been on the cross country and track teams at Dartmouth for all five years and this year, he is captain of the men’s cross country team.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural Context: The men’s and women’s cross country teams at Dartmouth are extremely close and do almost everything together. However, the one thing the teams don’t do together is run because the teams have different coaches and run at different speeds, so the teams split by gender for actual practice. This event is one of the few times each year that the men’s and women’s teams run together. Additionally, Dartmouth is one of eight colleges that are grouped together as the Ivy League. These teams are all located in the eastern U.S. and often compete both in academics and athletics. They created an athletic conference and the biggest competition each season for many sports is the Heptagonal Championships, or HEPS for short. This is called the heptagonal championships because there used to be only seven teams in the Ivy League and although some schools left and some schools joined to create a total of eight teams, the name stuck. This race is the only one all year where only all eight teams come together to race and it is a very important race for all of these teams. Lastly, “flair” is a term at Dartmouth used to describe funny clothes and costumes that people dress up in for fun events. It is common to see people wearing funny costumes any day around the college campus.
  • Social Context: This tradition is a fun one that brings both the mens and womens cross country teams at Dartmouth together before the biggest race of the season. It is a fun way to let the campus know about the upcoming event, especially when the teams run to ask the president of the college if he will attend. Additionally, it builds excitement within the team with a fun, silly, easy run and reminds everyone on the team why they love running and why they love to be a part of Dartmouth cross country.

Item:

  • The week before the ivy league championships (HEPS) race, the men’s and women’s cross country teams dress up in flair and run together around campus. The teams run through the library and show up at President Hanlon (the president of the college)’s house to ask if he will come watch the race the following weekend. This run is called Hepsoween and is a combination of the name of the race (HEPS) and the upcoming holiday (Halloween), and this combination also explains the funny costumes that the team wears during this run.

Associated file (a video, audio, or image file):

Transcript:

AB: Ok so do you want to just say your name for us and give me a little bit of background about who you are?

SM: Yep, um, so I am SM. I am a ‘21, 5th year here on the team and also the captain of the men’s cross country team.

AB: Perfect! Um, and then do you want to give me a piece of folklore about the men’s cross country and track teams?

SM: Yeah, one thing that comes to mind is hepsoween, um, which is basically a run where the men’s and women’s cross country teams get together and wear flair. They run through the library, they show up at Presiden Hanlon’s office and make him come out and ask him if he is coming to HEPS, which he never is, um, and yeah it’s right before HEPS and I guess, kind of a reason that it’s such a big deal is because, one, it kind of gets people excited for HEPS. It’s like right before, um, right around Halloween, which explains the costumes and flair and um, this team is kind of steeped in tradition and that kinda just, you know, kinda adds to the list of traditions that this team does and what gets people excited about being part of Dartmouth cross country.

AB: Perfect thank you!

Informant’s Comments:

  • Though the teams go to the president’s office every year, and he always tells the teams good luck, he never agrees to come watch the ivy league championship races. However, it is still always a fun tradition to send in two of the freshmen, one guy and one girl, to ask him if he will be in attendance.

Collector’s Comments:

  • This is probably my favorite cross country team tradition! The energy on the run is so fun and although I can get stressed leading up to such a big race, having this fun event to look forward to allows me to relax a bit and remember why I love being on this team!
  • This is a piece of customary folklore because it involves many actions that the men’s and women’s cross country teams do together, such as running through the library, though it has a bit of verbal folklore when every year, the teams ask the same question to the president of the college.

Collector’s Name: Abby Brazil

Hair bows on race day

General Information about Item:

  • Tradition/superstition
  • Language: English
  • Country of Origin: United States
  • Informant: LA
  • Date Collected: 10/19/21

Informant Data:

  • LA is a Dartmouth College graduate of the class of 2020. She was a mid-distance athlete while at Dartmouth, but ran both cross country and track for all four years. She majored in economics at Dartmouth, is originally from Florida and now lives in North Carolina.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural Context: All cross country runners on a team must wear the same uniform top and a pair of team issued bottoms at a race. However, anything else that the runner chooses to wear is up to them. Some women’s teams wear matching bows or hair ties in their hair to continue the matching outfits, but this is not a requirement. Another important thing to note is that cross country is unique because it is both an individual and team sport. Individuals run on their own, but in the end, the points are tallied for an overall team score, which makes it especially important for teams to be cohesive and work together to do well as a whole.
  • Social Context: Dartmouth is a school steeped in tradition and one tradition for the women’s cross country team to wear ribbons in their hair during a race. LA explained that for her, the meaning of wearing these ribbons was to continue these traditions and run for both current and previous teammates. This knowledge of those who came before her gave her strength during races. Additionally, the matching element of the ribbons allowed the team to feel united on the starting line because even though each person runs alone, in the end, cross country is a team sport.

Item:

  • The women’s distance athletes at Dartmouth would always wear ribbons in their hair for both cross country and track races. These ribbons are some combination of Dartmouth colors and are made by the sophomores for everyone else on the team.

Associated file (a video, audio, or image file):

Transcript:

AB: Ok, here we go! Um, yeah so do you want to give a quick background on who you are?

LA: Sure! My name is LA…that seems very formal but um…..I am a Dartmouth ‘20, and was on the cross country and track teams and studied economics at Dartmouth, originally from Miami, Florida.

AB: Perfect! Um, and then do you want to give me this piece of folklore or any piece of folklore about the women’s cross country and track team?

LA: Sure! Um, something that our team was…kind of a team tradition that we always did on race day, whether it be cross country or track….we had ribbons that we’d wear on race day. And this is something that we had the sophomores make each year, sometimes they were….some years they were green, and then a different year it was green and white, and then a different year was black. And, essentially they would just get…they would write the names of each person on one side of the ribbon and then, I think on the other side we would just write DXC, Dartmouth cross country, and um maybe draw a lone pine or something like that. But, we would, you know, put those in our hairbands and um, wear them with our uniforms on race day and I think this is, you know, just something that really brought us together and kinda allowed us to share in the moment in the same way and kind of have that uniform look. But also, just feel ready to go on race day and have that kind of team tradition to carry on, it really helps you think about all of the women that have run on the cross country team, um on the Dartmouth team, throughout the years. To see pictures and um, hear stories about previous teammates, to kind of know that you carry on that tradition and um, that kind of strength going into a race is pretty special.

AB: Perfect thank you so much!

Informant’s Comments:

  • LA also used to wear bows in her hair for workouts as well, but these bows would be a variety of different colors and patterns and weren’t limited to the Dartmouth colors of green, black, and white. She said that wearing these would get her excited for workouts and made her feel fast!

Collector’s Comments:

  • A saying that I have heard throughout my time as a runner is “look good, run fast”. I think that wearing hair bows is a similar idea to this, where we dress up a bit for race day so that we are going to run fast in the race!
  • This is a tradition that has also been kept alive for all of my time at Dartmouth and I have loved wearing these hair bows while I race.
  • This is a material piece of folklore, since it is something physical that the athletes wear on race day. Additionally, it is a bit of a superstition in the form “If I do A, then B” because LA believed that if she wore the bow, then she would race well.

Collector’s Name: Abby Brazil

Captain note tradition for women’s cross country HEPS

General Information about Item:

  • Ritual/tradition/gift
  • Language: English
  • Country of Origin: United States
  • Informant: JS
  • Date Collected: 10/13/21

Informant Data:

  • JS is a Dartmouth graduate of the class of 2020. She is originally from New York but now lives and works in San Francisco. While at Dartmouth, JS was a distance athlete on the women’s cross country and track teams. Additionally, she was a team captain her junior and senior years.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural Context: Dartmouth is one of eight colleges that are grouped together as the Ivy League. These teams are all located in the eastern U.S. and often compete both in academics and athletics. They created an athletic conference and the biggest competition each season for many sports is the Heptagonal Championships, or HEPS for short. This is called the heptagonal championships because there used to be only seven teams in the Ivy League and although some schools left and some schools joined to create a total of eight teams, the name stuck. This race is the only one all year where only all eight teams come together to race and it is a very important race for all of these teams.
  • Social Context: Although cross country rosters can be quite large throughout the normal season, only twelve female and twelve male athletes are allowed to compete at the cross country heptagonal championships. Therefore, selection into this group is an honor based on whoever has been racing the fastest throughout the previous races that year. These notes and gifts are a symbol that the upperclassmen and leaders on the team recognize the efforts put in by the rest of the women to do well enough to make the team. This is a way to get everyone confident and excited to race the next day and bring everyone together as a team.

Item:

  • The night before the Heptagonal Championships cross country race, the captains of the women’s cross country team give a little gift and personalized note containing kind words of encouragement to each of the twelve female athletes who will be competing the next day.

Associated file (a video, audio, or image file):

Transcript:

AB: Ok, here we go. Um, so do you want to give us a little bit of background, you know, what your name is, who you are, about your time at Dartmouth?

JS: Yes I would love to!…My name is JS. I graduated from Dartmouth in 2020, um, I was a runner and a captain on the women’s cross country team. Right now, I am in San Francisco, I am from New York originally and I am doing diabetes research and applying to med school.

AB: Perfect! Um, ok so can you give me the piece of folklore that we talked about?

JS: Yes, so one piece of lore from the women’s team was that the captains would kind of give a little gift and personalized note to each of the twelve athletes competing at HEPS for cross country at the end of October/early November. So that would normally be something that the night before the race, the captains would distribute kind of a little personalized note or gift and kind of words of encouragement to each of the women who would be competing the next day.

AB: Perfect, um, and then do you want to give me just a little bit of like, you know, what this tradition meant to you, why you continued it as a captain?

JS: Yeah, so I remember when I was a freshman in 2016, I kind of scraped my way onto the HEPS squad in the fall. I was I think our 11th out of 12 who was competing and I was introduced to the tradition when our captains, Helen and Jennie, gave us little pendants that they had made in the jewelry studio. So they, like, stamped out, kind of pieces of metal and they stamped HEPS 2016 onto them and gave them to us along with a little kind of note. And the physical side, kind of died out over the years, where we didn’t really continue doing the jewelry or like the physical gift, just because of — it was, you know, pretty time consuming. But it was definitely memorable to me as kind of a marker, you know, of what the significance of competing at HEPS is, um, and I do think that even, you know, even when it was the physical token along with a little note, it was really like the words that someone who was a leader on the team shared that kind of meant the most. And I think, you know, especially for a freshman, or someone who is on, you know, the tail end of the twelve, just kind of hearing something — hearing that, you know, the leaders that I was looking up to were like noticing particular things about like the work I had put in and that they believed in me really meant a lot. So over the years, that was something that was really cool to kind of continue and be the person that was writing those notes and you know, maybe finishing them on the bus to the meet. Um, and I do think that it was also important that even though HEPS wasn’t necessarily even the biggest or like most competitive meet that we did…we always had the NCAA northeast regionals the week or two weeks after, and then a couple years the team did go to nationals, um….HEPS was always like the only race where we did kind of, you know, give those letters and those words to the roster that was competing. And I think that kind of speaks to how that was an opportunity to, um, like represent oneself and also represent Dartmouth and you know, kind of an event where there was extra meaning assigned to wearing the Dartmouth jersey, um, and everything that that stands for. So, hopefully it’s something that the team continues even now past my time. But that is what it meant to me.

AB: Perfect thank you so much!

Informant’s Comments:

  • During her freshman year, JS was one of the last people to make the Dartmouth women’s heptagonal championship team. Therefore, she was nervous coming into such a big race and yet also excited to be selected for this team. The team captains at the time gave her a stamped piece of jewelry made in the jewelry studio at Dartmouth.
  • She continued this tradition as captain on the team for two years and although it was sometimes rushed and she had to finish the notes on the bus ride to the race, she always made sure to keep doing it.
  • JS also commented on the fact that our team is also competitive on the national scale, so heptagonal championships are no longer our biggest race. However, she felt that the reasoning for only writing notes for HEPS is that it is the race where wearing the Dartmouth uniform means the most, since it is in direct competition with the other Ivy League schools.

Collector’s Comments:

  • This is a tradition that has been carried on for all of my time at Dartmouth as well. As a captain of the cross country team this year, I will be giving out notes to the team when we go to the heptagonal championships at the end of October.
  • However, the physical gift part of the tradition is something that was lost before my time at Dartmouth, and I think it is interesting to find this out just before I must continue on the tradition. I will talk to my co-captain about potentially bringing this part of the tradition back!
  • This is a material piece of folklore because it involves gift-giving from the team captains to the other athletes at the race.

Collector’s Name: Abby Brazil

Crossing the finish line superstition

General Information about Item:

  • Verbal lore/superstition/tradition
  • Language: English
  • Country of Origin: United States
  • Informant: BH
  • Date Collected: 10/13/21

Informant Data:

  • BH was a Dartmouth class of 1977 graduate. While at Dartmouth, he was a distance athlete on the men’s cross country and track teams for all four years. After graduating college, he became a track coach, first at other schools, but eventually back at Dartmouth. BH coached at Dartmouth for 28 years before retiring last year. He is still a big team supporter and comes to cheer on the mens and womens teams at any races he can.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural Context: The day before a big cross country race, many teams will arrive at the location of the race. The teams arrive a day early so that they can run through the course and see what it is like. In track meets, a track will always be the same or almost the same, so there is no need to do a “run-through”. However, cross country courses can range wildly, so it is important for teams to know what the course is like so they can make their race plan accordingly. During this course run through is where the superstition detailed below comes into play.
  • Social Context: This is a superstition that is passed down through the team as seniors warn freshmen of the potential dangers of crossing the finish line before race day. Additionally, as BH pointed out, this is likely due to the runner’s focus on performing well and crossing the finish line on race day, not the day before. Due to the effort that runners put into each race, it can sometimes be difficult to even reach the finish line, so focusing on putting the effort in there may require going easier on days leading up to it, but this is an important aspect of the sport that upperclassmen remind the underclassmen.

Item:

  • When doing a course run-through the day before a cross country meet, you should never cross the finish line or else it will be bad luck and cause someone on your team to have a bad race the next day.

Associated file (a video, audio, or image file):

Transcript:

AB: Ok, um, so yeah! Do you want to give a quick background on who you are?

BH: Yes, um, my name is BH. I am a Dartmouth class of ‘77 which I am quite proud of. I share that class with President Hanlon. I was a college track coach for 40 years, 28 of which were at Dartmouth College. I am still an active runner myself, I still live in Hanover, and I still follow the Dartmouth teams very closely, so I like to stay in touch with the students!

AB: Perfect! So do you want to give me the piece of folklore that you told me?

BH: When I came back to start coaching at Dartmouth back in 1992, one of the things that every coach does is the day before a big race is they have their team jog the course the day before. So that was pretty straightforward, however I noticed something really unusual, like as we were nearing the end of our run. As we were approaching the finish line, a couple of the seniors pulled everybody to the side and said, “Remember, nobody crosses the finish line”. So instead of going down the normal path, everybody veered off the line at the end there. I asked one of the seniors about it and he said, “Well, we never cross the finish line during warm up because it is bad luck-it will be a bad race for somebody tomorrow”. So I kind of thought about it and said, well, no harm no foul, so we’ll just keep on doing that.

AB: Perfect, um and then yeah do you have any like thoughts on, you know, maybe where this came about or what this meant to the team or anything like that?

BH: If I was going to try to analyze it, which is probably difficult to do with a lot of superstitions, I would say that it kind of goes back to the idea that the important thing is the day of the race, not the day before the race. So hopefully it makes people think about, “I really want to focus on crossing the finish line when it counts”, which is on race day, not just on the day before where we’re just kind of warming up and doing something very easy and everything there. So hopefully it’s a superstition that’s rooted in the fact that races are more important than practice.

AB: Perfect thank you so much!

Informant’s Comments:

  • Cross country coaches often have the ability to stop superstitions or allow them to continue based on the requirements they set for their athletes. BH explained that in his mind, this superstition was relatively harmless, so he allowed it to continue on his team.

Collector’s Comments:

  • This is a superstition that I have also heard throughout my time as a cross country runner, so it is not something that is only done by Dartmouth men’s cross country team. However, I have been on some teams that are adamant about this superstition and some that don’t care, so it is interesting that the men’s team at Dartmouth is so strict about this tradition.
  • This is a superstition in the form “If I do A, then B”, where in this case, B is something bad that will occur if the athletes cross the line the day before the race.

Collector’s Name: Abby Brazil