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March 7, 2002
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About that Locust Walk bike-riding ban Illustration
by Bo Brown Dear Benny, Is the ban on riding bicycles on Locust Walk during the hours of
major pedestrian traffic ever enforced? I increasingly get the impression
it is not. Dear Eagle Eyes, Theres no bike riding allowed, ever, on the Locust Walk footbridge. Dear Benny, What is the origin of taking a bite out of the skimmer on Hey Day? Dear Nibbler, We do not know the exact origins of the practice of chomping down on the plastic foam skimmers worn on Hey Day, now held on the last day of classes in the spring. But we do know why skimmers are worn in the first place, thanks to material in the University Archives. The straw hat tradition dates to 1904, when students dressed more formally than they do now. To mark the revival of the annual Penn-Princeton baseball rivalry, The Pennsylvanian that year encouraged students to wear new straw hats to the game, and the custom quickly caught on. In 1916, Straw Hat Daytraditionally the second Saturday in Maymorphed into Hey Day, a general observance of the juniors passage into senior year. Hey Day became formal in 1931 when the honors and awards formerly presented on Class Day during Commencement week were incorporated into the Hey Day celebrations. Got a question for Benny? Send it to the Current, 200 Sansom Place East, 3600 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, PA 19104-6106, e-mail it to current@pobox.upenn.edu or call 215-898-1423. |
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