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  2. Oskee Wow-Wow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oskee_Wow-Wow

    "Oskee-Wow-Wow" is an invented phrase similar to other college cheers and yells. The Illinois cheer was used from before the turn of the 20th century. In the summer of 1910, Hill and Green composed and entered "Oskee-Wow-Wow" and several other songs into a contest for a student-composed opera.

  3. Cheering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheering

    All-male "yell leaders" supported the Princeton football team with cheers from the sidelines. (cited:: Valliant, Doris, pg 15) The railroad cheer is like the foregoing, but begun very slowly and broadly, and gradually accelerated to the end, which is enunciated as fast as possible. Many cheers are formed like that of the University of Toronto: [4]

  4. Oski Yell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oski_Yell

    The Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League have a version of the Oski Yell, originally created by Vince Wirtz in the early 1920s. Wirtz developed the choreography for the cheer which was performed by "Pigskin Pete". [2] The yell is still in use in a modified form called "Oskee Wee Wee" by the current Pigskin Pete at Tiger-Cats ...

  5. NFL Cheerleader Sisters from Opposing Teams Compare Biggest ...

    www.aol.com/nfl-cheerleader-sisters-opposing...

    Nicole said in the TikTok that she and the Falcons "don't" chant cheers during games. "Out mouths are closed the entire game. We don’t yell, we don’t scream, we don’t do any of that," she ...

  6. Mailbox: Reader says Ohio State football fans shouldn't be ...

    www.aol.com/mailbox-reader-says-ohio-state...

    Penn State has long, complicated cheers that they yell throughout the game. We have “Go Bucks” and “O-H-I-O.” Nothing else I can think of, especially during plays. Maybe a few cheers would ...

  7. Collegiate sport ritual in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collegiate_sport_ritual_in...

    These are led by Yell Leaders rather than cheerleaders in order to "intensify the crowd" at games and events. [9] Texas A&M's chants are even used to rally up students before game day at events such as Midnight Yell Practice, which began to take its roots in the early 1900s, as yell leaders direct the ritual chants and old army cheers. [10]

  8. Skol, Vikings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skol,_Vikings

    Skol (written "skål" in Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish and "skál" in Faroese and Icelandic or "skaal" in archaic spellings or transliteration of any of those languages) is the Danish-Norwegian-Swedish-Icelandic-Faroese word for "cheers", a salute, or most accurately a toast, with a raised glass, cup, or 'skål' (meaning a bowl or container for liquids), as to an admired person or group.

  9. Hoya Saxa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoya_Saxa

    Hoya Saxa (/ ˈ h ɔɪ ə ˈ s æ k s ə / HOY-ə SAK-sə) is the official cheer and "college yell" of Georgetown University and its athletics teams. The term hoya is an Ancient Greek word usually transliterated from οἵα as hoia from the word hoios (οἷος) meaning ' such ' or ' what ' as in ' what manner of, ' and is used in certain ...