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Purduvian Party and Mock P Collection

 Collection — Multiple Containers
Identifier: UA 207

Scope and Contents

This collection contains materials about the Mock P and the Purduvian Party. Included are recordings and ephemera from the Mock P Conventions.

Dates

  • Creation: 1951 - 1964

Access Information

The collection is open for research.

Copyright and Use Information

Copyright held by Purdue University. Consult with Purdue University Archives and Special Collections prior to reproduction of materials.

Biographical / Historical

Mock P was a Purdue student initiative to reproduce the national political convention and atmosphere every four years on Purdue’s campus. The idea to reproduce the national political atmosphere was first expressed in 1935 but did not come to fruition due to a lack of sufficient campus support. In the Fall semester of 1951, Dr. Paul Lull of the Purdue Speech Department together with two graduate students, reignited the idea and Mock P was born on Purdue’s campus. Purdue’s Mock P attracted national attention via television broadcasting.

Mock P was a nonpartisan university sponsored event. The goal of Mock P was to accurately simulate the party election process and correctly identify the candidates that would be elected as President and Vice President of the United States. The fictitious political party used at Mock P was called the One-Higher Party, before it was quickly renamed the Purduvian Party. Mock P was a multi-day event held at Lambert Fieldhouse with 1200 participants. Student housing units and organizations were each assigned a state or territory to represent at the convention. Participants were expected to research their states and the election.

The Mock P keynote speakers included Dr. Elmo Roper, William Ayers, Ross Bass, R. R. McKeldin, James Farmer, Floyd B. McKissick, John McNaughton, Thurston B. Morton, and Edmund S. Muskie.

One tradition of the Mock P was picking a mascot for each convention. Bruiser, the Phi Gam’s bulldog, was selected as the mascot for the first Mock P convention. The 1956 mascot was a shaggy dog named Demosthenes. The 1960 mascot was a duck named Kruzelda that was found wandering on campus. The 1964 mascot was a beaver. The planning committee could not find an actual beaver for the convention, so instead, Dean Larson, a Purdue student, served as the beaver mascot. The 1968 mascot was a penguin. In 1972, Mock P was discontinued in favor of the Indiana Student Political Convention.

Extent

.48 Cubic Feet (two legal folders, one oversize folder, four 800ft film cans, and three 1,200ft film cans)

Language of Materials

English

Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements

Film reels must be migrated to a digital format before use. Contact Purdue University Archives and Special Collections in advance if interested in using this material

Acquisition Information

The program and newspaper clippings were transferred to Archives by Rita Baines (Development Office of Aero-Astro), who received it from Purdue alum David Lewis. The provenance for the scrapbook is unkown. The recordings are from the Purdue Audio-Visual Center, Motion Picture Production Unit.

Processing Information

All materials have been housed in acid-free folders and acid-free boxes.

Title
Purduvian Party and Mock P Collection
Status
Completed
Author
Ben Parnin
Date
8/18/2025
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Edition statement
first edition

Repository Details

Part of the Purdue University Archives and Special Collections Repository

Contact:
504 Mitch Daniels Boulevard
West Lafayette Indiana 47907 United States
765-494-2839