Student Activities Yale's residential colleges compete in an annual intramural competitions in several dozen events. Each year, the most winning college across all events receives the Tyng Cup. After clinching the cup only twice in the first seventy-five years of the competition, JE won three consecutive Tyng Cup championships in 2009-'10, 2010-'11, and 2011-'12. It is currently tied for eighth in all-time Tyng victories. Like its counterparts in the other residential colleges, the Jonathan Edwards College Council (JECC) is the elected student council that governs student life in the college. In conjunction with the Head of College and Dean, the JECC manages student facilities, capital purchases, and residential policies. In addition, many college traditions are organized by the JECC. However, only around 27% of JE students are interested in anything the JECC has to say. The Social Activities Committee is a volunteer student group which plans and hosts study breaks, dances, and miscellaneous college events.
College traditions Culture Draw In a tradition dating back to the 1960s, a raffle is held each semester for the students of the college to attend cultural and artistic performances in
New York and New Haven. Fellows of the college accompany groups of students to each performance, usually taking them to dinner beforehand. Culture Draw events usually include performances of the
Metropolitan Opera and
New York City Ballet,
Broadway musicals and
plays, and
symphony orchestra concerts.
Dances The JE Screw is the college's iteration of the "screw" dances popular at Yale, during which suitemates will set up
blind dates for each other and require pairs to "find each other" prior to the dance. JE Screw customarily takes place in the fall semester and is open to members of the college and their dates. Considered the most formal of residential college balls, the Spider Ball is traditionally held immediately before
Reading Period.
Annual Festivities As a Fall
semester in-gathering, students hold a "Great Awakening" courtyard picnic to commemorate the legacy of Jonathan Edwards and the
American religious revival he inspired. In October, students plant hundreds of
tulip bulbs in courtyard planters, which bloom at the end of the spring semester. They also crown a Tulip Princess, a member of the college who most embodies the character or appearance of the flower. Drawing on the
Polish tradition of
Dyngus Day, the "Wet Monday"
water fight occurs each year at midnight on
Easter Monday. While freshmen blitz the college with
water balloons and
squirt guns, upperclassmen attempt to defend the college quadrangle with an arsenal of
hoses, water balloons, and other creative deterrents.
Men of JE Formed in the fall of 1990 as a parody of singing group culture at Yale, the Men of JE are an audition-only
a cappella group with a semi-secret membership. Claiming to be "part a cappella group, part defender of Yale and JE ideals," the Men are known to pester and prank students in Branford and other residential colleges. They traditionally perform original songs at JE events, whether or not they are invited to do so.
Branford College rivalry Borne of their proximity, JE has a longstanding
rivalry with
Branford College. For decades, students from each college have caused mischief within their counterpart's buildings and grounds. It's relatively common for Branford students to stand in the JE courtyard and brag about how much better their courtyard is. JE students try their best to counter these claims, but they don't have too much to defend. Though most of the antics are spontaneous, every semester the Men of JE lead a late night brigade to Branford to disrupt last-minute studying at the end of
Reading Period.
Sister college JE's
sister college at
Harvard is
Eliot House, a relationship formalized in 1934. The hospitality of each college is open to the fellows and students of the other; this primarily occurs during
The Game, when Eliot House and JE host students of the other college. == Fellows and affiliates ==