displays the Hook 'em Horns. The first known usage of the "Hook 'em" phrase comes from a South Saint Paul Booster Club organized for the
Saint Paul Winter Carnival in 1916 and achieved national scope from use at the
University of Minnesota through the 1930s. Minnesota didn't trademark the phrase or the hand signal. Neither did the University of Iowa. There was also a Texas basketball team during the 1930s known as the "Hook 'Em Cows" which may have contributed to the use of the phrase and gesture at the
University of Texas. In 1955, Harley Clark, who would later introduce the signal, got the idea for the hand-sign from his colleagues Tom Butts and Henry K. Pitts, who had been casting shadows on the wall at the Texas Union. Clark was a member of the
Tejas Club, as well as head cheerleader at UT, a position that was elected by the student body. "It was second only in importance to the Texas governor," he jokes. Clark showed an enthusiastic student body the sign a few nights later at a football pep rally at Gregory Gym. According to Neal Spelce, who attended the rally when he was a student at the university, "a lot of people didn't get it right at first," but it caught on rapidly from there. By the thousands, students extended an arm to create the now famous salute. The next day, at the
Texas Longhorn vs.
TCU football game, Clark stood in awe as the "Hook 'em Horns" hand sign surged from one side of the stadium to the other. Within a few years, the symbol was widely known to football fans across the state and country.
Sports Illustrated featured the Hook 'em Horns symbol in front of a Texas pennant on the cover of their 10 September 1973 issue. That issue of the magazine highlighted the Texas football program as the best in the nation at that time. Is there a rallying cry for the thinkers and doers of tomorrow? A motto that sums up their passion for creativity and their pursuit of discovery? Sure there is: "Hook 'em, Horns". We're Texas. What starts here...changes the world. The hand gesture is not featured in the advertisement, which shows an aerial view flying along
Interstate 35, then over downtown
Austin, Texas, past the
Texas State Capitol and finally arriving at the
Tower of the Main Building as Cronkite says the slogan. The advertisements are typically run during
NCAA sporting events. ==Identical gestures==