The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Fun in the foam for St Andrews students as tradition takes over

RAISIN MONDAY: Fears of bad behaviour unfounded as event goes without a hitch

- CRAIG SMITH csmith@thecourier.co.uk

Hundreds of St Andrews University students have proved there is no place like foam, after taking part in the traditiona­l Raisin Monday celebratio­ns.

Students dressed in flamboyant costumes were let loose on St Salvator’s Quad’s Lower College lawn yesterday morning as part of the centuries-old Raisin Weekend – the culminatio­n of festivitie­s in which freshers say thank you to their more senior student “parents” for mentoring them.

Fears about the potential for alcoholfue­lled anti-social behaviour were unfounded and St Andrews Students’ Associatio­n president Paloma Paige spoke of her pride in the student body following what appeared to be a flashpoint-free few days.

First years could be seen slipping and sliding over the grass while a healthy crowd of spectators looked on from the bank above.

Fancy dress outfits included bananas, gnomes, robots and a police box.

“I’ve been very happy with how things have turned out and I think it’s gone splendidly,” Paloma said.

“I was out over the weekend handing out water and it was funny, more than anything else – students came by and they were handling themselves quite well.

“I was always quite confident that I could make my own choices and that my ‘parents’ weren’t actually out to hurt me, in spite of all the scare stories, so I understood that these kind of incidents were few and far between.

“They were anomalies, not the norm, and the point is just to have fun in this really unique tradition.”

Raisin Weekend is so called because students traditiona­lly gave their academic parents a pound of raisins to thank them for welcoming them to St Andrews.

Paloma, who came to study internatio­nal relations at St Andrews from California, admitted the foam fight tradition took her by surprise a few years ago but believes it is a fantastic way for first year students to meet new students and develop friendship­s that continue throughout a student’s time at university and beyond.

“I hadn’t a clue about it, to be honest, and I didn’t know what I was getting into but it was one of the best experience­s of my first year. The foam hasn’t gone back centuries, especially the shaving foam.

“It’s just evolved throughout the years and this has now become the quintessen­tial part of the whole weekend.”

 ?? PA. ?? Students take part in the traditiona­l Raisin Monday foam fight on St Salvator’s Lower College lawn. Worries about the possibilit­y of unruly behaviour proved unfounded.
PA. Students take part in the traditiona­l Raisin Monday foam fight on St Salvator’s Lower College lawn. Worries about the possibilit­y of unruly behaviour proved unfounded.
 ?? Pictures: PA. ?? The messy event is the culminatio­n of a weekend of festivitie­s where first years say thank you to their more senior student “parents” for mentoring them, which many do while wearing fancy dress.
Pictures: PA. The messy event is the culminatio­n of a weekend of festivitie­s where first years say thank you to their more senior student “parents” for mentoring them, which many do while wearing fancy dress.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom