Tag Archives: Lou’s Challenge

Lou’s Challenge (Annabel Revers)

Title: Lou’s Challenge

General Information:

  • Type: Verbal Lore
  • Language: English
  • Country of Origin: United States
  • Informant: MR ’18
  • Date Collected: 11/7/2021
  • Location Collected: Phone Call

Informant Data:

  • MR ’18 is a twenty-six-year-old male who was born in Boston and grew up in Weston, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston. He is a Dartmouth Alumni and graduated in 2018. He majored in Computer Science and currently works as a software engineer in New York City, where he lives, for a financial technology company. While at Dartmouth, he was heavily involved in the Computer Science Department as a teaching assistant and tutor. He also worked at the technology support desk. He is of German and Polish heritage and does not prescribe to any religion, although he grew up with two Catholic parents.

Contextual Data:

  • Cultural Context: Dartmouth has various traditions that can be classified as “challenges.” While their origins are often unknown, these challenges provide students with both entertainment during their time at Dartmouth and the opportunity to participate in and perpetuate Dartmouth traditions. They also provide Dartmouth students with the opportunity to prove that they can do something challenging outside of academics or sports and, as they are frequently attempted with friends, provide a bonding experience among classmates. The “Lou’s Challenge” is just one of many such challenges.
  • Social Context: Lou’s is a restaurant in Hanover, New Hampshire, located on the main street of the town and a brief minute walk from the green, which marks the center of campus. Lou’s serves breakfast, lunch, and dinner, and is by far the most popular brunch place in town. It typically has long wait times on the weekends as it is popular among student as well as other residents of Hanover. The phrase “Lou’s Challenge” is typically used exclusively by students rather than the general Dartmouth population. Although professors and likely other Hanover residents know about the challenge, it is students alone who attempt this feat. This slang is used around campus and is not limited to a particular season, though people more frequently attempt the Lou’s Challenge when weather is warmer. The term is typically used on “on-nights” when students go out to parties, which would be Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, as students are typically out late anyways. The term is also frequently used during busy academic weeks when students are staying up late studying for exams and decide to attempt the challenge. Most students strive to attempt the challenge at least once in their Dartmouth careers, but there are lots of failed attempts where students cannot manage to stay up for so many hours and instead fall asleep. Students typically hear of this challenge early on in their Dartmouth Career, perhaps their freshman fall, but will attempt the challenge at any point in their Dartmouth Career. It is almost always attempted in pairs or groups, never alone.

Item:

  • The phrase “Lou’s Challenge” refers to the challenge of staying up all night and going to Lou’s Restaurant when it opens at 6am. For example, a student will ask their friend, “Want to do Lou’s after going out tonight?”.

Associated File:

  • Transcript: “I first heard about the Lou’s Challenge early on in my freshman year from a friend who said we should do it. I’m guessing he learned about it from an upper classman. I did the Lou’s Challenge once while I was at Dartmouth. It was a terrible experience, it was not fun at all and I just slept the whole day afterward. I would define the challenge as staying up all night and then going to Lou’s at 6am. Either you’re pulling an all nighter studying for an exam or you are out partying and trying to find things to do to keep you busy and help you not fall asleep.  I would use it, like, “Wanna do the Lou’s Challenge tonight after going out?”. I think it probably came about a long time ago since Lou’s has been around for like ever, but also probably because people here are bored and have nothing better to do with their time.”

Informant’s Comments:

  • I would not recommend doing the Lou’s Challenge as it’s not a fun experience, but it’s a Dartmouth tradition so I guess we have to keep it going.

Collector’s Comments:

  • The motivation for completing the Lou’s Challenge varies from person to person, but many students, including MR ’18, feel like they have to complete it just for the sake of keeping the tradition going and passing it down to future generations. The Lou’s Challenge, though impossible to say how far back it dates, has been going on for likely decades at the very least. I think this says a lot about human nature and our desire for tradition in order to feel more a part of our community. By completing the Lou’s Challenge, students feel more immersed in campus culture and feel united with each other by the common experience of staying up all night and going to the same place afterward for breakfast. It should also be noted that the challenge itself may be considered Customary Folklore–in this entry it is the phrase itself and its meaning as slang that we are documenting.

Collector’s Name: Annabel Revers

Tags/Keywords: Verbal Folklore, Students, English, Dartmouth, Slang, Challenges, Food, Lou’s, Lou’s Challenge

Lou’s Challenge

Lou’s Challenge

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When attempting to complete the Lou’s Challenge, a participant must stay up all night, either from partying or studying, and stay awake long enough to make it to Lou’s Restaurant at its 6 a.m. opening time for a delicious breakfast.

Folklore Type: Customary


Lou’s Challenge Stories

May 31, 2016

Anonymous Female 16’
Age: 22
Birthplace:  San Diego, CA
Current Residence: Hanover, NH
Place Collected: Dartmouth College
Date Collected: April 22, 2016
Genre: Verbal-Story
Language: English
Country of Origin: USA

Social/Cultural Context: Entertainment

Informant’s Comments: 

“Me and three of my friends were in the library midterms week. We were forced to pull an all nighter to get our work done on time. We decided to reward themselves with the Lou’s challenge in the morning for all of our hard work.”


Anonymous Male 19’

Age: 19
Birthplace:  Flemington, New Jersey
Current Residence: Hanover, NH
Place Collected: Dartmouth College
Date Collected: April 22, 2016
Genre: Verbal-Story
Language: English

Country of Origin: USA

Social / Cultural Context: Entertainment

Informant’s Comments:

“I did the Lou’s’ Challenge during orientation week with people I had just met that night. I wanted to start my experience at Dartmouth off on the right foot. Some of the people I did the challenge with became my best friends here at Dartmouth.”


Anonymous Male 16’
Age: 22

Birthplace:  Chicago, IL

Current Residence: Hanover, NH
Place Collected: Dartmouth College
Date Collected: April 22, 2016
Genre: Verbal-Story
Language: English
Country of Origin: USA

Social / Cultural Context: Entertainment

Informant’s Comments:

“I am a brother in a house on campus that would like to remain anonymous. Me and my fellow brothers started at 9pm and stayed up all night playing pong, did the Lou’s challenge, and then went back to playing pong before we all fell asleep. “


Anonymous Female 19’

Age: 18
Birthplace: Doylestown, PA
Current Residence: Hanover, NH
Place Collected: Dartmouth College
Date Collected: April 20, 2016
Genre: Verbal-Story
Language:English
Country of Origin:USA
Social / Cultural Context: Entertainment

Informant’s Comments: 

“My teammates and I had just gotten back from a three day Ivy Championships at midnight. We stayed up the entire night celebrating our victories and ended the celebrating at Lou’s at 6am. I was so delirious and tired that I accidently gave a $40 tip instead of an $8 tip.” 


Anonymous Male 17’

Age:21
Birthplace: San Diego, CA
Current Residence: Hanover,NH
Date Collected: May 3, 2016
Genre: Verbal-Story
Language: English
Country of Origin:USA
Social / Cultural Context: Entertainment

Informant’s Comments:

“When I was a freshman, I knew of a senior who completed Lou’s Challenge three days in a row during Green Key. The senior claims he didn’t sleep all weekend, and slept for the following next three days.”


Anonymous Male 19′

Age:20
Birthplace: Washington, DC
Current Residence: Hanover, NH
Date Collected: April 23rd, 2016
Genre: Verbal-Story
Language: English
Country of Origin: USA
Social / Cultural Context: Entertainment

Informant’s Comments:

“I had three papers due on a Monday during the Winter Term. Going into the weekend I had one of my three papers done. I ended up not sleeping at all Saturday night, so I decided to do Lou’s Challenge that following morning. Fortunately for me, I was able to complete Lou’s Challenge and his papers. The sad part is that I did the challenge alone.”


Collector’s Comments: 

As present within all these stories, the members who attempted and completed the Lou’s Challenge mentioned above, each did it with the purpose to claim they completed Lou’s Challenge at least one, probably of the many nights, Dartmouth students pulled an “all-nighter”. The motivation and purpose for each individual’s decision to complete Lou’s Challenge was so they could carry on Dartmouth tradition and culture that has been around for decades at Dartmouth. By completing Lou’s Challenge, each person feels a closer sense of community that is immersed throughout this campus. The Lou’s Challenge allows a unique perspective for Dartmouth students to create bonds with other Dartmouth students that ties them into the folk group of Lou’s Challenge students because they share a common experience of pulling an “all-nighter” and by finishing off their night with a Lou’s breakfast.

Dartmouth Folklore & Collection Process

Proof of Dartmouth Folklore

The Dartmouth Seven, the Ledyard Bridge Challenge, and the Lou’s Challenge are all well-known challenges among the Dartmouth “folk” (i.e. students, professors). These three challenges are the most well-known among Dartmouth Students. The origin of each is unknown, but there are rumors about where each one comes from. Most Dartmouth students hear about these challenges from either an upperclassman or a fellow classmate. Because these challenges are passed on from incoming freshman class to incoming freshman class, it is proof of its folklore; the Dartmouth Seven, the Ledyard Bridge Challenge, and Lou’s Challenge survive because they are passed down annually to new Dartmouth students.

How We Collected Our Folklore

The stories were collected from a range of Dartmouth students and Dartmouth Alumni, both male and female. Through one-on-one interviews, we were able to collect Dartmouth Challenge stories. In addition, surveys were conducted in order to get the broadest range of contributions possible.

All of the stories we collected were from people who wished to remain anonymous. In order to respect their wishes for privacy, we removed their names from our database and changed the names of people within the various folklore examples.

We decided to choose the most PG-13 related Dartmouth Challenges stories due to the graphic content some stories contain. Because we wished the stories to stay a true as possible from our informants, if a story was too graphic we left it out. We choose the best six stories for each Dartmouth Challenge to include in our collection project.

Finally, participants were asked why they partake in these challenges and what the challenges mean to them. Due to the similarity of many of the responses, we combined them all into one collective response at the bottom of each challenge page under our collector’s comment section.