From Woody's Couch

Our Playbook on OSU History

Category: Traditions (page 7 of 7)

Commencements past: A Who’s Who of Speakers

President Gerald Ford, 1974

What would a U.S. president, an actor, a journalist and an astronaut have in common with Woody Hayes? They are all OSU Commencement speakers.  In fact, there have been numerous presidents, actors, journalists and even astronauts speak at OSU’s commencement ceremony over the years.

The first U.S. President was William McKinley, who actually spoke to graduates about a year before filling that role. Gerald Ford spoke at the August 1974 commencement, less than a month after being sworn in as such because of Richard Nixon’s resignation. The University of Michigan graduate (he played football for the Wolverines, who lost 34-0 to OSU his senior year) spoke about the dismal job market for graduates, the nation’s lack of energy independence, and competition from China. Sound familiar? Other presidents were: George H.W. Bush (1983), George W. Bush (2002), and Bill Clinton (2007).

Erin Moriarity, 2004

Former astronauts who have spoken at an OSU Commencement include: the first person to walk on the moon – Neil Armstrong (1971). John Glenn, the first American to orbit the earth, was the other astronaut, and he’s spoken at two ceremonies: in 1984 while he was a U.S. Senator, and in 2009. Kathryn D. Sullivan – the first American woman to walk in space – spoke at the 1997 ceremony. The OSU Commencement ceremony also has hosted several well-known pilots: General Curtis E. LeMay, who was a General in the Air Force during WWII and an OSU alumnus (1962), and Eddie Rickenbacker, the WWI flying ace (August 1957).

Woody Hayes, 1986

Journalists have included Walter Cronkite (1968), Barbara Walters (1971) and OSU alumna Erin Moriarty (2004). Interestingly, Walters spoke about the hard choices women who work face when they have children, a dilemma that still resonates with many women. And actors have included Bill Cosby (2001) and Christopher Reeve (1996), who spoke just a year before he died from complications related to spinal cord injuries he suffered from a horse-riding accident.

Finally, OSU’s most-winning football coach, Woody Hayes, spoke at the March 1986 ceremony of his love of football, history and of course, the University.

You can find many of the transcripts of these speeches on our web site at https://library.osu.edu/node/12462

Twelve Days of Buckeyes: Why “Carmen, Ohio” is our alma mater

Fred Cornell, 1915

It’s hard to imagine a home football game not being followed by the team and fans singing OSU’s alma mater, “Carmen, Ohio.” It took years, however, for this ritual to become a steadfast tradition.

Fred Cornell, a member of the Men’s Glee Club in the early 1900s, definitely wrote the lyrics, but it’s unclear how he was inspired to do so. One story has Fred writing the song in the fall of 1902, on the train taking him and the football team from Ann Arbor, after a loss of 86 to 0. Cornell felt that the team and fans needed an inspirational song to lift their spirits.

A more likely account, supported by a 1910 article in the Alumni Monthly, has Fred himself saying that he wrote the piece in the fall of 1903, because the Glee Club was looking for an alma mater. There were several entries submitted by women, and Cornell was urged by several other men to write something.

What’s not in doubt was that it was first performed in 1903 on New Year’s Eve at an off-campus event. The first on-campus presentation was at the Wednesday Convocation, when students returned to campus. It was then sung at football games, but did not have any great popularity at first. The tune also seems to have been undecided for some time, with several different pieces of music used until the Spanish March was finally chosen.

By 1918 “Carmen, Ohio” was played on the chimes at Orton Hall everyday at 4:30, following taps. A phonograph record was produced of the song in 1921.

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