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Carmen Ohio" (Latin: Song of Ohio) is the oldest school song still used by Ohio State University. The song was composed by freshman athlete and Men's Glee Club member Fred Cornell in 1902 or 1903. According to some accounts, he composed it on the train ride home from Ann Arbor, Michigan after Ohio State suffered an 86-0 loss to the Michigan ...
The Ohio State University Marching Band. Planning for the construction of Ohio Stadium resulted in a contest in 1919 to create new school fight songs. Frank Crumit, an alumnus of Ohio University but a Buckeye fan, wrote "Buckeye Battle Cry" and submitted it to the contest. Some older versions of the lyrics show not COME ON OHIO!, but rather O ...
In the wild, baby squirrels have a high mortality rate, with only one in four surviving to adulthood, as squirrels are a common prey animal for predation by larger mammals and raptor birds. If ...
After discovering it was an injured baby squirrel, she began caring for it and chronicled its rehabilitation on social media, hoping to get advice and assistance from others. The DNR found out she ...
Longo found Peanut as a baby squirrel in the middle of a busy Manhattan street. After eight months of rehabilitation, Longo tried to release Peanut back into the wild. A day and a half later ...
"Fight The Team) Across the Field" is the older of two fight songs of Ohio State University, with the newer one being "Buckeye Battle Cry".Although the lyrics reference football heroics and was composed by the football team's varsity manager, William A. Dougherty, Jr., [1] the song is used by Buckeye teams of all sports.
Though "Beautiful Ohio" was originally written as a waltz, one version of the song is a march, arranged by Richard Heine. It is commonly performed by the Ohio State University Marching Band when traveling, including their appearance in the 2005 Inaugural Parade of President George W. Bush [6] and at the 2009 Inauguration of President Barack Obama.
The state claimed it had to euthanize both animals Friday so that they could be tested for rabies — because the squirrel sunk its teeth into the hand of an official during the disturbing raid.