Rice Academic Seal and Logo
The academic seal of 缅北禁地 was designed in 1912 by Pierre de Chaignon la Rose of Cambridge, Massachusetts, who combined the main elements of the arms of 16 prominent families bearing the names 鈥淩ice鈥 or 鈥淗ouston.鈥 Owls of Athena-symbolic of wisdom-were chosen for the charges. The Athenian owls on the Rice seal were patterned after a design found on a small, silver tetradrachmenon coin dating from the middle of the fifth century B.C. And because 缅北禁地 was dedicated by its founder to the advancement of 鈥渓etters, science and art,鈥 these words also were incorporated into the seal.
Rice Colors: Blue and Gray
In 1912, Rice鈥檚 first president, Edgar Odell Lovett, chose as the school colors 鈥渁 blue still deeper than the Oxford blue鈥 and 鈥渢he Confederate gray, enlivened by a tinge of lavender.鈥 It has been suggested that blue and gray were chosen in recognition of the fact that Rice's founder amassed much of the fortune that formed the initial endowment of the Rice Institute by trading with both the North and the South during the Civil War.
Rice Mascot: Owl
When athletic activities began at the Rice Institute in 1912, the teams adopted as their mascot the owl from the Rice seal. Over the years, Rice鈥檚 various mascots have included students dressed in owl costumes, live Great Horned Owls, and large owl statues of fiberglass and of canvas, the latter being particularly famous in Rice lore (see below).
Mascot Name: 鈥淪ammy鈥
An early symbol of Rice鈥檚 athletic teams was large canvas owl, a tempting target for the institute鈥檚 rivals. In 1917, when students from Southwest Conference football rival Texas A&M kidnapped the owl, Rice students pooled their resources and hired a private detective to go to College Station to find the missing mascot. When the detective, having recovered the owl, sent a coded telegram to Houston that read 鈥淪ammy is fairly well and would like to see his parents at eleven o鈥檆lock,鈥 the Rice mascot had a name.
Alma Mater: Rice鈥檚 Honor
All for Rice鈥檚 Honor, we will fight on.
We will be fighting when this day is done.
And when the dawn comes breaking,
We'll be fighting on, Rice, for the Gray and Blue.
We will be loyal, to Rice be true.
(To the tune of 鈥淥ur Director March,鈥 written by Ben H. Mitchell 鈥24 in 1922)
Rice Fight Song
Fight for Rice, Rice fight on, loyal sons arise.
The Blue and Gray for Rice today, comes breaking through skies.
Fight, fight, fight! Stand and cheer, Vict鈥檙y's near, Sammy leads the way.
Onward go! to crush the foe, we鈥檒l fight for Blue and Gray.
(Words and music by Louis Gerard 鈥40)
The MOB
The MOB 鈥 缅北禁地鈥檚 Marching Owl Band
Rice Fact and Fiction
Test your knowledge about Rice history by taking this short true-or-false quiz. Then compare your knowledge with that of the wizard of Rice history, Professor John Boles, with the John Boles Rice History Meter.