The Oski Yell is the University of California Berkeley spirit yell from which Cal's mascot, Oski the Bear, derives his name. Although Oski appeared in 1941, the yell was first performed around the turn of the 20th century. The yell's origins are uncertain, although the University of Illinois originated a similar yell in 1911 (with a different last line). Another early version is credited to Vince Wirtz, who led a similar cheer beginning in the 1920s at football games for Hamilton, Ontario teams.
Berkeley's lyrics are:
The Oski Yell is currently rarely heard in the stands, its function overtaken by spirit songs such as "Big C," "Fight for California," and "Sons of California." It can still be heard thundering from the Greek Theatre on Friday nights before the Big Game at the annual Big Game Rally.
The Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League have a version of the Oski Yell, originally created by Vince Wirtz in the early 1920s. Wirtz developed the choreography for the cheer which was performed by mascot "Pigskin Pete." The yell is still in use in a modified form called "Oskee Wee Wee" by Pigskin Pete at Tiger-Cats games:
Wirtz's original version of the cheer is the following:
In 1968, the cheer was the subject of a National Film Board of Canada documentary Oskee Wee Wee.
A parody of the Berkeley cheer, called Bossy Cow Cow, exists at UC Davis (which was originally established as a farm for the use of Berkeley's College of Agriculture). This variation of the cheer made its debut during UCD's 1926 football game against the College of the Pacific.
Bossy Cow-Cow, however, is still used today by UC Davis's California Aggie Marching Band-uh!