Which is interesting, because I thought campuses were supposed to teach us how to use words, not run off with them in the middle of the night. Someone from that fine school would probably tell you gaining rights to this humble definite article is simply branding.
An attempt to distinguish the university from, say, Ohio Northern. Or maybe Jesus. If you believe in a fiery collapse of everything.
These assets hold significant value, which benefits our students and faculty and the broader community by supporting our core academic mission of teaching and research.
So a band of scarlet and gray fanatics get to own the — there it is again — word and keep it from the rest of us. You know, only the most common word in our language. Charging campus guests for the air they breathe? Imposing a sunshine tax for games at The Horseshoe? Asking anyone with a buckeye tree in their yard for royalties? As if there is some other Ohio State or Ohio State University that is creating great confusion, and we are all crying out for some way to distinguish them.
There is not, of course. He proudly carried the Buckeye nickname for the rest of his life and it gradually spread to his companions and to other local settlers. By the s, writers were commonly referring to locals as 'Buckeyes. According to the book "The Official Ohio State Football Encyclopedia," authored by Ohio State football historian Jack Park, newspapers have referred to the team as the Buckeyes since at least The team did not officially adopt the nickname, however, until — 60 years after the team's first season in Sharp-eyed viewers may see stickers on the back of Ohio State's helmets when they play.
Those stickers depict buckeye leaves and are awarded to players for exceptional play. The exact reason for why the practice began has been lost to time, but the prevailing theory is that Hayes and Biggs thought that if players were rewarded for big plays, it would encourage them to play harder. And so, the tradition stuck, inspiring similar practices by Georgia dog bones , Clemson paw prints and Florida State spears. Ohio State's mascot — the aptly named Brutus Buckeye — actually predates the buckeye sticker tradition.
Per Ohio State , he debuted three years prior on Oct. People commonly confuse the Ohio Buckeye with the Aesculus hippocastanum , or the horse chestnut. In addition, the Aesculus octandra , or the Yellow Buckeye, also grows in Ohio. It is closely related to the Ohio Buckeye, and it is difficult to differentiate between the two species.
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