The earliest years of this student organization are not well known. The RUF/NEKS began in the late 1910s. In December 1915 at a basketball game between
Oklahoma and
Oklahoma A&M a group of
football players were yelling, cheering, and causing a ruckus. An elderly woman shouted, "Sit down and be quiet you
roughnecks!" The name was later changed to RUF/NEKS. The founder of the RUF/NEKS was Charles Leslie High. The Board of Regents voted to disband the organizations and suspended 54 students between the two, pending an investigation. Following a warning from OU President Dr. W.B. Bizzell to cease all hazing activities, the organizations were accused of defiantly paddling freshman pledges in a secret initiation. In previous years, the paddlings were a public affair as the freshmen were made to march across campus. The RUF/NEKS and Jazz Hounds were both reinstated on March 23, 1932 on condition that the paddling traditions be banned. During
World War II, the RUF/NEKS were disbanded so the members could join the armed forces. The group was reformed in 1946. In 1952, the
FBI confiscated the RUF/NEK ceremonial shotguns. These ceremonial shotguns are used at various times throughout football games including when the team scores, comes out on the field, and at the end of every
quarter. All but one was returned and that one is currently on display at the
Smithsonian Institution. The use of the ceremonial shotguns is amongst the many traditions carried out by this organization. Every year, over a hundred students apply to join the group but less than a
dozen are chosen. ==Traditions==