Skip to main content

Class of 2021 carries on whitewash tradition

ASU's newest freshmen introduced to one of the school's oldest rituals over the weekend


August 21, 2017

It's a tradition that started in the 1930s and is still going strong. 

For the past eight-plus decades, Arizona State University's freshmen make the short hike up "A" Mountain in Tempe, grab a cup of white paint and cover the 60-foot (usually gold-colored) "A" that gives the mountain its nickname. It will later get painted back to its traditional gold color before the first football home game of the season, but for now, the whitewash symbolizes a fresh start to the new school year.

On Aug. 19, ASU's latest crop of students capped off their first week of classes by taking part in this time-honored tradition. Check out a gallery and video from the event below.

Video by Jordan Currier/ASU

More Sun Devil community

 

Jacob Cooper is recipient of Charles Wexler Mathematics Prize

Charles Wexler prize recipient finds passion for math at ASU

Editor’s note: This story is part of a series of profiles of notable spring 2024 graduates. Jacob Cooper initially enrolled as a computer science major at Arizona State University, but after taking…

Headshot of Ethan Leventhal in front of Old Main on the Tempe campus.

Dean's medalist plans to pursue PhD in mathematics

Editor’s note: This story is part of a series of profiles of notable spring 2024 graduates. Scottsdale, Arizona, native Ethan Leventhal started as a math major because he loved math but wasn’t sure…

ASU innovation in society graduate Ava Steckel poses by the bridge.

ASU innovation in society graduate aims to ensure that the future is for everyone

Editor’s note: This story is part of a series of profiles of notable spring 2024 graduates. For Idaho native Ava Steckel, having diverse passions is a strength. So when she attended Arizona State…