From Woody's Couch

Our Playbook on OSU History

Category: People (page 44 of 52)

March Madness Part II: The offbeat side of OSU

Prince Orizu, 1942

Ohio State Royalty?

Prince Akweke Abysinnia Nwafor Orizu of Nigeria studied at Ohio State in the early 1940s. Prince Orizu, or “Chris” as hewas known on campus, came to OSU around 1940 to study political science; he had previously received his Junior Certificate from Cambridge University in England. The then-22-year-old prince was a member of the Nwei, a progressive monarchy in the then-British Protectorate of Nigeria. Why did he choose Ohio State? He told the alumni magazine it was because it was in the heart of America. Apparently, it was known on campus that he was part of the ruling family. After returning to Nigeria, Prince Orizu had a long political career, followed by service in education. He died in 1999.

Donkey at Univ. Hall, 1893

 

Roaming Livestock

How can Ohio State forget its roots when it has—and seems always will have—livestock running amok, with or without the aid of students? In the early years of the University (prior to the turn of the century) a group of students carried a (very quiet and cooperative) donkey up to the third floor of the old University Hall. They put the donkey in a professor’s office and waited until morning. Students who arrived early for class that morning were rewarded with helping to carry the donkey back down the stairs. Sounds like fun, huh? Once again it is clear that the Internet had not been invented yet.

 

Students with cannon, 1884

If You Give a College a Cannon…

You get chaos. For that, we can thank Luigi Lomia, OSU’s first U.S. Army drill instructor. He arranged for cannons to be brought to campus as part of the military training that was required for all male students at the time. He was, after all, an artillery man himself. However, it appears it soon became a common prank to drag a cannon off to the river, or to push one into Mirror Lake. The following morning, the students in drill would have to lug it back into place. There is also an account of someone attempting to fire a tree trunk from the cannon. Amazingly, there were no casualties among students, faculty or livestock reported after any of the stunts.

OSU basketball legend Katie Smith still setting records

Katie Smith, 1993-1994

There’s been a lot of talk lately about Samantha Prahalis, the stand-out guard for the OSU Women’s Basketball team. And for good reason: The 5-foot-7 senior was just named Big Ten Player of the Year on Tuesday, just four days after she broke the scoring record for the team, with a 42-point run against Minnesota.

Still, she has a lot of accolades to accumulate to beat the previous record-setter: Katie Smith, OSU’s highest-achieving women’s basketball player ever.

Smith, who first played basketball in fifth grade on a boys’ team in Logan, played for the women’s team from 1992 to 1996. During that time, she racked up plenty of achievements, including:

  • Named to the academic All-Big Ten three times
  • Chosen Big Ten Player of the Year in 1996
  • Tallied an OSU single-season record of 745 points her senior year
  • Set a Big Ten career record of 2,578 points

With 10 career, six single-season and six single-game records under her belt, Smith was inducted into the OSU Athletic Hall of Fame in October 2001. Earlier that year, her jersey number – 30 – was retired. She is the only woman basketball player to have achieved that honor.

Smith, who graduated from OSU in 1996 with a bachelor’s degree in zoology, went on to play for three professional women’s basketball teams: the now-defunct Columbus Quest, the Minnesota Lynx and the then-Detroit Shock (now in Tulsa). She helped the Quest win both American Basketball League championships in its three years of existence, and she was named the Most Valuable Player of the 2008 WNBA Finals, when the Shock beat the San Antonio Silver Stars in a three-game sweep for the national championship. In 2005, she became the first women’s basketball player to reach 5,000 career points, then became the first to move past the 6,000-point mark in 2007.

Smith also was a three-time Olympic gold medalist as a member of the USA women’s basketball team in 2000, 2004 and 2008.

Now a member of the Seattle Storm, she participates in the WNBA Cares program, holding basketball clinics for children in India. She also has had a more local impact, having organized youth basketball camps in her hometown of Logan.

Filed by C.N.

Bleeds Scarlet and Grey: Col. George L. Converse

Col. George L. Converse, n.d.

The Reserve Officers’ Training programs for the Army, Navy and Air Force are such fixtures at OSU that it would be difficult to imagine the campus without them. There was a time, however, when there was no such thing as the ROTC program. With the help of George Converse, and several other OSU leaders, the national ROTC program was created and the OSU program flourished.

Converse, who grew up on a farm near present-day Cleveland Avenue, enrolled as a freshman at OSU at age 17, in 1874. After his first quarter, however, he received an appointment to West Point, and eventually graduated in 1880. Two years later, he was a member of the 3rd U.S. Cavalry in Wyoming, when his company was sent to Arizona to combat the uprising by the Apaches, led by Geronimo. In one battle, Converse was shot in the eye and had to ride on horseback for 40 miles to receive medical treatment. The bullet was never extracted, and the rest of his life he wore a black eye patch. University lore said that he could see more with his single eye than most men could see with two.

Due to his injury, he retired from active duty in 1884 and returned to Columbus. He was later called back to serve in the Spanish American War, but returned again to Ohio State in 1900 to serve as the University’s first Commandant of Cadets in the Department of Military Science. He held that position, as well as a professorship and subsequently chairmanship, of that department for 18 years. During his tenure, enrollment grew from 400 to almost 3,000 students. Commandant Converse, whom students affectionately referred to as “Commy,” also gave regular Thursday morning talks to male freshmen. (On Wednesday mornings, the freshmen listened to President William Oxley Thompson.)

Converse Hall, 1949

With the outbreak of World War I, Converse returned to active-duty status, this time as examining officer for all Ohio officer training camps. During that period, as he continued his teaching duties at OSU, he also co-authored the Ohio Plan, along with Pres. Thompson, Gen. Edward Orton Jr. (professor of ceramic engineering) and OSU alumnus Ralph D. Mershon. That plan, which outlined university civilian training programs, became part of the 1916 National Defense Act, which established the ROTC as a national program.

In 1918, he left OSU when the military promoted him to district inspector, overseeing officer training camps in Ohio, Indiana, West Virginia and Kentucky. In 1920, he retired from the military—for good—and returned with his wife, Effie, to their house on Neil Avenue. (Effie had served as interim Dean of Women during the 1918-19 academic year.) He died on November 16, 1946.

Five years before he died, ground broke on the ROTC building, on February 17, 1941. In 1973, the Board of Trustees voted to re-name the building after Converse, who had served longer than any other Commandant at OSU.

Filed by C.N.

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