From Woody's Couch

Our Playbook on OSU History

Month: July 2013

Women students dig for gold at annual role-reversal dance

A couple at the Gold Diggers dance, 1949

A couple at the Gold Diggers dance, 1949

While the name is a bit misleading, the Gold Diggers’ Prom is yet another long-gone campus tradition. Beginning in the late 1930s, a dance was held once a year where the ladies and gents essentially reversed roles: The young woman would ask a young man to accompany her to the event, and she would pay for everything, from tickets to corsages.

The night of the dance, she would pick him up– with whatever means of conveyance was feasible – at his dorm, fraternity, or wherever he lived. At the dance, the Queen would crown a King, who would preside over the dance in place of the Queen.

For many years, the contest to be Gold Diggers’ Prom king in the spring was almost as intense as the one held in the fall for Homecoming Queen. According to a 1938 issue of The Lantern, “competition is mounting to a fever pitch as more and more candidates enter the race for King of the Gold Diggers’ Prom. The male of the species is walking around campus these days with a supercilious grin, gloating that ‘at long last’ he is coming into his own.”

Dale Denny, the Gold Digger King of 1958

Dale Denny, the Gold Digger King of 1958

Meanwhile, there was always good-natured teasing and shenanigans attached to the dance: Girls would bring their boyfriends corsages of carrots and beets instead of flowers. A carriage may await the boyfriend instead of an automobile. Boyfriends would make their dates wait, in memory of all the times they spent waiting on the young ladies.

The term ‘gold digger’ originally meant men who went out to California to join the gold rush in the 1840s. Its current meaning was coined in 1915, but did not gain popularity until the 1930s (the time of the dance) when many young women had to support themselves because of the Great Depression; thus, theoretically, they would go looking for rich husbands.

As with many social mores, women’s expectations for marriage and financial security began to change after World War II, and the dance eventually was finally dropped in the 1960s.

The crowning of the Gold Digger King, 1952

The crowning of the Gold Digger King, 1952

School of Music sure cut a rug with Hopkins Hall concerts

sign_rug_concert_dancingWe recently received from the School of Music a scrapbook of sorts kept by former Music Prof. Theron R. McClure, who started a series of free performances of chamber music in the Hopkins Hall Gallery he called “rug concerts.” The first concert was held in April 1974 – on the rug of the Gallery – and it featured lutes. No chairs were provided for concert-goers; they had to sit on the rug, which is another reason McClure came up with the name. When the weather warmed up, the concerts migrated outside to the Oval, and when the weather got cold again, the concerts returned to the indoor venue.

Dancers perform at the Rug Concert

Dancers perform at the Rug Concert

McClure told The Lantern in 1977 that he started the concerts because “material for several thousand concerts is just sitting on the shelves in the music department. These concerts provide an opportunity for this music to be performed.”

McClure joined the Music faculty as a part-time instructor in 1947 and he retired about the same time the concerts ended in 1979. In addition to his long career at Ohio State, he is credited with helping found the Columbus Symphony Orchestra, and he also served as a bassist in the Cleveland Orchestra. McClure died in November 2010 in Sarasota, Florida, at the age of 98. After his death, the School of Music received from his estate nine viols to enable students to be able to play a complete repertoire of music for early, period ensembles.

Alutto fills role as interim president, for second time

Joe Alutto, 2004

Joe Alutto, 2004

This week, Joseph A. Alutto begins his second term as interim president of OSU, the fifth person to fill this role for the University between administrations.

Alutto has actually worn many hats at OSU since he first arrived in 1991 as Dean of the Fisher College of Business. He came to Ohio State after spending 14 years serving as dean of the State University of New York at Buffalo School of Management. He had earned his bachelor’s degree in business administration from Manhattan College, a master’s degree in industrial relations from the University of Illinois, and a Ph.D. in organizational behavior from Cornell University.

When Alutto arrived as dean, it was known simply as the College of Business and was just starting to formulate a plan to implement a major restructuring of the college.

Early in Alutto’s tenure, the College’s name changed, after securing a $20 million gift in 1993 from OSU alumnus Max M. Fisher to help fund a $67 million, six-building complex for the College. It is now named the Max M. Fisher College of Business.

Alutto talks with Max Fisher, 1998

Alutto talks with Max Fisher, 1998

Roughly a year later, the restructuring plan was in place, calling for, among other things, new facilities, more faculty development and support, and a new emphasis on executive education.

Alutto spent the next 16 years implementing those changes, helping lift the college from a spot that was nowhere near the top 25 in national rankings, to 25th in the nation this year, according to U.S. News and World Report. Along the way, in 1998, Alutto was named Executive Dean of the professional colleges, coordinating the activities of the Colleges of Engineering; Food, Agricultural, and  Environmental Sciences; Education and Human Ecology; Law, and Social Work.

In July 2007, when then-President Karen Holbrook left OSU, Alutto took over as interim president for three months until E. Gordon Gee came on board for his second term as president, in October of that year. Shortly after, Gee tapped Alutto as Executive Vice President and Provost. Alutto served in that position until last week, when he was supposed to retire, but agreed to serve as interim president until a replacement for Gee is found.

Fisher College of Business Dedication, 1999

Fisher College of Business Dedication, 1999

Alutto is actually the fifth person in University history to serve as  interim president. In 1925, George Rightmire was interim president for a year before the Board of Trustees made him president in his own right.  Following Rightmire’s presidency (1926-1938), William McPherson was interim president for nearly two years.  McPherson was Dean of the Graduate School at the time and had actually been acting president in 1924 when President William Oxley Thompson was ill for several months.

The next interim president was J. Richard “Dick” Sisson, who held the position for six months after Gordon Gee resigned in 1997 to be president at Brown University.  Sisson was Vice President and Provost from 1993 until 1998.  Former president Edward Jennings took over for two months in 2002 between Presidents Kirwan and Holbrook.

Finally, Joseph Alutto has been interim president twice – in 2007 before Gordon Gee’s second administration and now following it. Three interim presidents, McPherson (1887), Rightmire (1895, 1898, 1926), and Sisson (1958, 1960), were also alumni of Ohio State University.