THE ACADEMIC SEAL AND LOGO


The academic seal of Rice University was designed in 1912 by Pierre de Chaignon la Rose of Cambridge, Massachusetts, who combined the main elements of the coats of arms of sixteen prominent families bearing the names Rice or Houston. 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 5th century B.C. Because Rice University was dedicated by its founder to the advancement of "letters, science, and art," these words also were incorporated into the seal.

The Rice logo was adopted in 1989. The Rice academic seal and Rice logo are protected designs and part of the Rice University identity system. For information about the identity system or permission to use a protected mark, please contact the Office of Public Affairs at 713.348.6750.


MASCOT: OWL

When athletic activities began at The Rice Institute in 1912, the Rice intercollegiate teams adopted the owl as their mascot. Over the years, interpretations of the mascot have included students dressed in owl costumes, live great horned owls, and large owl statues of canvas and fiberglass.

COLORS: BLUE AND GRAY

In 1912, Rice's first president, Edgar Odell Lovett, chose as the school colors "a blue still deeper than the Oxford blue" and "the Confederate gray, enlivened by a tinge of lavender."


ALMA MATER: RICE'S HONOR

All for Rice's 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 "Our Director March," written by Ben H. Mitchell '24 in 1922)


Copyright © 2000 by Rice University.
A publication of the Office of Institutional Research. (Email: instresr@ruf.rice.edu).

Updated: Friday, July 14, 2000


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