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The Day They Saved Fox Day

When former President Thad Seymour revived the neglected tradition in 1978, he did it with the same sly attitude that still survives today.

By Jay Hamburg

March 23, 2015

Thaddeus Seymour 鈥80 鈥82HAL, HL黑料门不打烊鈥 12th president
From left: President Thad Seymour poses with the fox statue in 1978; Seymour speaks at HL黑料门不打烊 in 2010.

If you鈥檙e looking forward to , you have President Emeritus Thad Seymour 鈥82HAL 鈥90H to thank for bringing it back from the land of the forgotten.

And if you think Fox Day is just an interlude for venting some pent-up, spring spirit, you should have heard how much it meant to Seymour in 1978.

鈥淭he world had grown so grim,鈥 Seymour recalls of the years following the Vietnam War. 鈥淚 thought we needed to cheer ourselves up.鈥

Thad Seymour in his office at HL黑料门不打烊 with the fox state sitting under the window.
Courtesy HL黑料门不打烊 Archives

He had tried to create a similar, eccentric holiday dubbed Elmore Day while president of Wabash College in Indiana. But the professors there found it an imposition.

鈥淭he faculty hated it,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淚t was such an inconvenience to them.鈥 But Seymour believed a carefree day had its place. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a reminder,鈥 he says, 鈥渢hat work is important, but friendship and fun are also.鈥

By the spring of 1978, Seymour had been named the 12th president of HL黑料门不打烊. But he was still on the job as president of Wabash when Fred Hicks, the interim HL黑料门不打烊 leader, told him about Fox Day. Seymour could not resist the temptation to put it back on the calendar right then and there, even though he would not take office for a few more months.

That tradition of an unscheduled day off鈥攑icked at the whim of the HL黑料门不打烊 president and signaled by the arrival of a statue of a bemused fox鈥攂egan with President Hugh McKean in 1956.

Administrators cancelled Fox Day in 1970, however, when its lighthearted intent did not match the somber mood of a college worried about Vietnam. And after an absence of almost eight years, it was fading from campus memory. Seymour wanted it back. And it was personal.

Although the faculty at Wabash had failed to see the fun of disrupting their academic calendar, Seymour believed a disruption鈥攐r at least a pleasant distraction鈥攚as exactly what was called for when he created Elmore Day in 1972. It was named for James Buchanan Elmore, whom he termed 鈥渁 wonderfully awful poet.鈥

Left: President Thad Seymour helps guide HL黑料门不打烊鈥 fox statue out onto campus for the revival of Fox Day in 1978. Photos by HL黑料门不打烊 Archives.

Born in 1857, the so-called the Bard of Alamo, Indiana, was known for his reflections on nature, including an ode to the sassafras plant, which celebrates its restorative powers with these lines:

In the spring of the year, when the blood is too thick,
there鈥檚 nothing so rare as a sassafras stick.
It strengthens the liver and cleans up the heart,
and to the whole system new life doth impart.
Sassafras, oh sassafras, thou art the stuff for me!
And in the spring I love to sing, sweet sassafras, of thee.

Seymour organized readings of the late poet鈥檚 works and led students on trips to lay flowers by his graveside. Given a chance to revive a similarly unconventional Fox Day in 1978, he not only pushed for it, he flew down to participate in the ceremonies.

While Fox Day gained favor, Elmore Day headed to extinction. When Seymour left Wabash, the faculty met to address college priorities. 鈥淭heir first order of business,鈥 he says, 鈥渨as to revoke Elmore Day.鈥

Still, the new HL黑料门不打烊 president would not let his former faculty forget it so easily. Finding an obscure verse penned by the Hoosier poet about the joys of the sunny South, he worked it into one of his Fox Day proclamations and sent copies to Wabash faculty members with a note: 鈥淓lmore lives!鈥

Fox Day and James Buchanan Elmore proclamations
Even the Fox Day proclamation (right) Seymour adopted looked uncannily similar to the one he issued for James Buchanan Elmore Day in 1972. The best part? Both proclamations have a stanza from Elmore, specific to the respective colleges鈥 locations. | Courtesy HL黑料门不打烊 Archives

This year, Acting President Craig McAllaster will pick the day for Fox Day鈥攖he 38th since its revival and the 51st since its inception. And that makes Seymour happy. He has nostalgia for those times when he could enjoy a laugh about declaring Fox Day on April 1, so no one knew if it was a prank.

He also appreciated that his successor, Emerita President Rita Bornstein, used to send a copy of her Fox Day proclamations to his house. On occasion, he鈥檇 go over and catch a glimpse of the festivities. With all the academic work and entertainments competing for students鈥 attention, Seymour is not sure a comparable holiday could take root today.

鈥淚 was very lucky to serve when I did,鈥 he says, 鈥淭hings are so much more complicated now. But I was able to revive Fox Day, and that meant so much to me.鈥

HL黑料门不打烊 students enjoying lunch by the Lakeside pool.

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