Scarabbean Senior Society
Encyclopedia
The Scarabbean Senior Society, with members known as “Scarabs,” is an honor society
Honor society
In the United States, an honor society is a rank organization that recognizes excellence among peers. Numerous societies recognize various fields and circumstances. The Order of the Arrow, for example, is the national honor society of the Boy Scouts of America...

 at the University of Tennessee
University of Tennessee
The University of Tennessee is a public land-grant university headquartered at Knoxville, Tennessee, United States...

. The group, established in 1915, has operated largely in secrecy despite being either wholly or partly responsible for many events, traditions, and activities in student life, athletics, and academics. The group’s motto is “To Be Nameless in Worthy Deeds.”

History and past contributions

The idea of the group first came to John Ayers (’15), the son of the University President Brown Ayers. He desired to form a group that could incorporate leaders in various campus organizations to better work together and coordinate on improving student life. He approached two faculty members for help, Elliot Park Frost and George Hebert Clarke, and the group was formed. The Scarabbean Senior Society looked at many different areas in the University and then sought ways to improve conditions.

It created, influenced, and encouraged the formation/construction of many features of student life, most of which are still felt today. The group established All-Students Club, now called the Student Government Association, in 1919. It started both Carnicus and the All-Sing Competition. The Society also created the predecessor the University’s Interfraternity Council, the Fraternity Relations Board.

After its early years, the group continued its impact at the school. It strongly supported the formation of the University Center and spiritual retreats. It also started, both in 1965, the school’s current student newspaper, The Daily Beacon, and the student activities fee to help pay for it and other endeavors. The group is also responsible for several University traditions, such as the Alma-Mater, the Torchbearer symbol, Aloha Oe, and Torch Night. In recent years, little is known about what the group has been involved in although a few things are known. It launched the Honors Ambassador’s Program to better recruit students and the Student Gift Committee, leading to the addition of University history onto the pedestrian walkway and the clock tower near the main library, among other things. It also used its alumni to set up a teaching award at the university, the L.R. Hesler Award.

Perhaps its most visible contribution to the university from its early years is Neyland Stadium. When the University started to build a new athletic field, the school ran out of money and could not finish the project. However, during a Society meeting, it was decided that the students and faculty could help finish the construction. So in the Spring of 1921, students and faculty leveled the field, dug drainage ditches, and added other improvements. Thus the new athletic field, Shields-Watkins Field, was now finished.

Society Beliefs, Traditions, And Membership

As stated earlier, the group’s motto is “To Be Nameless in Worthy Deeds.” It forms the basis of the group’s ideals. More can be accomplished by working behind the scenes on campus improvements with members unable to take credit. However, the group’s longtime faculty advisor, LR Hesler, in his history of the Society, said there is another quote that the group accepts which is Herman Goethe’s “Where there is much light, the shadows are deepest.”

A large part of the group that continues today does include an Egyptian and Pirate culture. The emphasis on ancient Egyptian culture can be traced to the use of the scarab beetle. It has had a place in most of the group’s history. A student’s time at the University and in the Society could be, “an experience where he can activate his spirit in he direction of improving his moral and emotional nature; where he can learn something from the stout-bodied scarab beetle – a symbol of his own resurrection.” The use of the scarab beetle is also used as part of the society’s logo, along with crossed swords. Other references to ancient Egypt include invoking “Bubastis” and the titles “Worthy Osiris” and “Amenophis III, “ which are leadership positions within the society.

The other culture used heavily in the Society is the Pirate culture. In its early years in the yearbook, a boat was used as the group’s symbol instead the scarab beetle and then it was used together with the scarab beetle before being dropped. The name of the group’s newsletter for most of its history was The Pirate until the name changed to Orange Slices. In addition to the two Egyptian-named leadership titles, the group also has two pirate-named titles, “Henry Morgan” and “Edward Davis.”

While there are several other traditions, they do not really use any Egyptian or pirate themes. Fellow members are called “comrades” and there is an annual meeting with current and past members every homecoming. The group still maintains a directory of all members called The Blackbook. The Society also flies a flag for every graduation to congratulate its graduates though no names are listed, only “Nameless.” The Society used to publish all members in the Volunteer yearbook but stopped after 1969, with the exception of 1981. Since 1969, very few new members are known.

Initiation and membership is closely guarded. In years past, the typical tapping ground for new initiates was at the University’s Torchbearer statue. But the current method is not confirmed although tapping students in the library and asking, “Are you ready?” is one of the current rumors concerning initiation. For most of its history, the group initiated members based on positions held. For example, the SGA President was always inducted along with the Vice President and the SGA Election Commissioner. But in recent years, it is possible the group stopped has stopped adding members based on positions held. For a majority of its history, membership was restricted to only white males but that policy has changed in recent decades.

Criticism

There has been plenty of criticism of the Scarabbean Senior Society but most of it has been within the past two decades. Due to the strength of its secrecy, the group was largely anonymous and nearly all students were unaware of its existence. But the group connected student leaders and mid-to-high level university administrators. Even in its early years, administrators handpicked members to discuss possible improvements and then those students would feed the information back to their respective groups and increase student support for these endeavors. The closeness of students to administrators has led to beliefs that such student members have been compromised and no longer represent the interests of the student body but rather the administrators and that they have a severe conflict on interest. The secrecy could allow members to act in their own interests instead without having to worry about an outcry from other students.

Other student leaders have occasionally decried the group for its influence on campus and ability to quash rival ideas that may not sync up with the group’s own ideas. In one letter to the editor in 1991 from several SGA executives and Torchbearer Award recipients, they point out how the group’s existence undermines SGA as the Scarabbean Senior Society is where the real interaction between students and administrators are located and where the implementation of ideas become a reality.

In the late 1990s and early 2000s, controversy concerning the group reached its loudest point. On the SGA discussion page, students continually posted about the Scarabs and how it was a major conspiracy. It was not until an expose by the school newspaper in November 1999 that the controversy was campus-wide. Students blasted the secrecy while outed members defended themselves by saying students should want top leaders to work in secret with the administration or blasted student ignorance. Allegations of rigging SGA elections followed and students became distrustful of especially the top SGA executives. The controversy followed into the next SGA election as flyers were posted around campus claiming that one of the candidates for president was a Scarab. While the candidate did confirm during a debate that he was a Scarab, he still won the election.

Famous Members

  • Howard Baker, Sr.
    Howard Baker, Sr.
    Howard Henry Baker, Sr. was a United States Representative from Tennessee. He was a member of the Republican Party.-Biography:Baker was born in Somerset, Kentucky in 1902 to James F...

    , US Representative from Tennessee

  • Howard Baker, Jr., US Senate Majority Leader, 1981–1985, Ronald Reagan
    Ronald Reagan
    Ronald Wilson Reagan was the 40th President of the United States , the 33rd Governor of California and, prior to that, a radio, film and television actor....

     Chief of Staff, 1987–1988

  • Bill Johnson, 1957 All-American guard in football

  • Estes Kefauver
    Estes Kefauver
    Carey Estes Kefauver July 26, 1903 – August 10, 1963) was an American politician from Tennessee. A member of the Democratic Party, he served in the U.S...

    , US Representative and Senator from Tennessee, running mate of Adlai Stevenson in 1956

  • Johnny Majors
    Johnny Majors
    Johnny Majors is a former American football player and coach. A standout halfback at the University of Tennessee, he was an All-American in 1956 and a two-time winner of the Southeastern Conference Most Valuable Player award, in 1955 and 1956. He finished second to Paul Hornung in voting for...

    , National Championship winning football coach

  • Peyton Manning
    Peyton Manning
    Peyton Williams Manning is an American football quarterback for the Indianapolis Colts of the National Football League . Manning holds the record for most NFL MVP awards with four. He was drafted by the Colts as the first overall pick in 1998 after a standout college football career with the...

    , current Indianapolis Colts
    Indianapolis Colts
    The Indianapolis Colts are a professional American football team based in Indianapolis. They are currently members of the South Division of the American Football Conference in the National Football League ....

     quarterback, 4-time NFL MVP

  • John Randolph Neal, Jr.
    John Randolph Neal, Jr.
    John Randolph Neal, Jr. was an American attorney, law professor, politician, and activist, best known for his role as chief counsel during the 1925 Scopes Trial, and as an advocate for the establishment of the Tennessee Valley Authority in the 1920s and 1930s...

    , Scopes Trial attorney

  • Chris Whittle
    Chris Whittle
    H. Christopher "Chris" Whittle is an American media and education entrepreneur. He is the chief executive officer of Avenues: The World School, a planned international system of independent pre-K-12 schools. Avenues will open its first campus in New York City in fall 2012. Whittle founded Edison...

    , past Chairman of Esquire
    Esquire (magazine)
    Esquire is a men's magazine, published in the U.S. by the Hearst Corporation. Founded in 1932, it flourished during the Great Depression under the guidance of founder and editor Arnold Gingrich.-History:...

    , launched Channel One News
    Channel One News
    Channel One News is a 12 minute news program for teens broadcast via satellite to middle schools and high schools across the United States. Channel One is owned by Alloy Media + Marketing and based in New York City.-Program History:...


External links

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