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FOUNDERS'
DAY
Founders' Day at Texas Woman's
University is a celebration of the founding of the
University and an opportunity to honor publicly
corporations and/or businesses, foundation and/or
organizations and non-graduate individuals/families that
provide support during the formative years of the
University and whose continued support ensures the
future for each new generation of students.
Founders' Day was originally known as
Pancake Night. In 1924 the Ex-Students Association chose
January 10 as College of Industrial Arts first "Pancake
Night" to honor the laying of the Administration
Building corner stone on January 10, 1903. A special
feature at the occasion was a pancake with 21
birthday candles to commemorate the date. The pancake
tradition came from a Middle Ages legend of monks being
served a cake baked in a pan upon returning from a long
journey while they told stories of their travels around
the warmth of the fire. Since most cakes were
baked in the ashes, this was a real luxury.
In 1936, about the same time CIA became
Texas State College for Women (TSCW), the name was changed from
Pancake Night to Founders' Day. Students provided the
programs and sponsored fund-raising projects in honor of
the event.
The observance of Founders' Day was
discontinued in 1955, but was revived on February 24,
1978 by former President Mary Evelyn Huey when she asked
the National Alumni Association, now the Former Students
Association, to assume responsibility for planning the
event.
Today, the event provides an opportunity
to reflect on the history of TWU and on the
contributions of those visionaries who set TWU on a
solid foundation for success.
Founders' Day 2008 will
be celebrated on
April 3, 2008 on the TWU Campus
For more information, please
contact Patrice Frisby at 940/898-3867
"We remember the founders, men and
women of vision
who saw the need for a great women's college and worked
to make it a reality ... members of the faculty and
administration
whose constant guidance through the years kept alive the
dream ...
and the students for whom the dream was built."
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