130th Anniversary Edition

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The Auburn Plainsman 130th Anniversary Edition

The Auburn Plainsman celebrates 130 years of publication By KRISTEN CARR & HARLEE MEYDRECH

Editor-in-chief & Asst. Managing Editor

In the fall of 1893, the first edition of The Orange and Blue hit the racks. Over the past 130 years, the paper now known as The Auburn Plainsman has served as Auburn University’s leading news source. The purpose of this print edition is not only to celebrate a milestone, it is to honor the legacy that has been handed down to us each year. For 130 years, The Plainsman has delivered dependable, local news to both our campus and community. As the Associated Collegiate

Press’ most decorated non-daily student newspaper in the country, The Plainsman upholds a tradition of excellence throughout its rich tradition that continues today. The Plainsman’s legacy began long before our current staff joined and will be carried on long after we leave. The Plainsman does not run off of one editor, one writer or one photographer. It is a wide network of creators and journalists that all come together to make and record history. Looking to the future, our staff hopes the faithful legacy of The Plainsman never fails to inspire young journalists to be thorough, honest and ambitious inside and outside of their writing.

If new writers get stuck on a story or get lost in finding an angle, we ask them to look to the past for advice from old editors and staff. We’ve been in your shoes – writing a terrible first story and getting discouraged that it may not come easily to us at first – but we’ve also come out the other side of the writer’s block tunnel, victorious and proud of the knowledge we’ve gained and the work we’ve accomplished. The Plainsman has changed quite a lot over the years, from one editor-in-chief to the next, from printing weekly to publishing mostly digitally, but one thing remains the same: this organization will never stop teaching, publishing and storytelling as long as it lives on. This publication will never stop growing and

making a name for itself in everything it does. From breaking news articles to listicles to gamers, The Plainsman is the place to find out about it all. For many of us, our time as journalists began with this organization, learning AP style and InDesign like our lives depended on it. For others, The Plainsman was just a stepping stone towards success. No matter what The Plainsman means to you, the wide network of The Plainsman family will never stop growing. Stories will never stop being written. The Plainsman will never stop being the voice of the Auburn community.

Published by The Auburn Plainsman


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The Auburn Plainsman table of contents

WELCOME 4 | COLUMN| Thanks to The Plainsman, my spirit is not afraid

19 | An Auburn staple: Toomer’s Drugs through the years

5 | Jack West gives insight on why The Plainsman went online

21 | Mayor Ron Anders: Auburn until the end

6 | Past editor-in-chiefs recount their memories at The Auburn Plainsman

22 | The growth of Auburn University since the creation of The Plainsman

OPINION

CAMPUS

10 | COLUMN| The 60th anniversary of racial integration at Auburn University & COLUMN| An international student’s perspective on a new culture 11 | EDITORIAL| Old Auburn versus new Auburn: still the loveliest village? & COLUMN| How working at The Plainsman inspired me 12| COLUMN| When silence spoke ‘Lowder’ than words

CULTURE 13 | Quentin Riggins elected as first Black president pro tempore of Board of Trustees 14 | Evolution of boutiques in downtown Auburn 15 | Love on the Plains: the Auburn connection 16 | What Auburn means to President Christopher B. Roberts

COMMUNITY 18 | Elementary school teacher Laura Collard embodying the Auburn Spirit

24 | Auburn Raptor Center’s work behind the War Eagle pregame flight 25| COLUMN| A semiotic history of Auburn University’s names 27 | Plainsman cartoonist recounts his time at Auburn 28 | Auburn architecture and campus adapts to Auburn’s growing population

SPORTS 32 | Plainsman sports alumni reflect on benefit of organization 33 | Auburn fans recount memories of two improbable moments of 2013 34 | Plainsman’s Choice: Best game of all time 35 | Plainsman’s Choice: Best athlete of all time 36 | History of women’s sports at Auburn University: Paving the way for the future of female athletics 38 | 1983 Auburn football: National Champion?

Cover art by Madie Champion| Graphic Design Editor Designed by Harlee Meydrech, Kristen Carr & Tucker Massey

39 | Plainsman Puzzles


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WELCOME

COLUMN | Thanks to The Plainsman, my spirit is not afraid By HARLEE MEYDRECH Assistant Managing Editor

The Auburn Creed reads: “I believe in a sound mind, in a sound body and a spirit that is not afraid, and in clean sports that develop these qualities.” Our motto at The Plainsman is: a spirit that is not afraid. I never took much time to think about what that meant to me until this year. The saying is more than just a banner at the top of our website or something we say. A spirit that is not afraid is being able to ask hard questions when you don’t want to. A spirit that is not afraid is believing in yourself even when the whole world tells you not to. A spirit that is not afraid is the blue blood of The Plainsman coursing through Auburn’s veins. A spirit that is not afraid lived through The Plainsman’s 1998 editorial board that published a paper with a blank front cover because Auburn’s president at the time wouldn’t speak to them. The headline read: “Speak Lowder, we can’t hear you.”

And there was no story to follow because he wouldn’t give a statement to student journalists but would to Birmingham News and Huntsville Times. A spirit that is not afraid lived through My Ly and Trice Brown breaking the news about the dean of the pharmacy school – Richard Hansen – who sexually harassed a student. A spirit that is not afraid lived through Jim Bullington, editor-in-chief of The Plainsman in 1961, when he challenged school segregation through editorials and news stories, often resulting in backlash from community members and the local Ku Klux Klan. A spirit that is not afraid lives through me, Harlee Meydrech. I am no longer afraid to ask the hard questions, dig deep into a story and speak my truth thanks to The Plainsman. I joined The Plainsman during my very first week at Auburn University. I navigated down to the student media offices tucked away in the bottom of the Melton Student Center and entered a room that would become one of my favorite places in the world, as silly as it sounds.

There I met Trice Brown, one of the editors at the time, and he told me about an interest meeting. I’ve never been shy a day in my life, but it was definitely intimidating signing up for something I didn’t have much experience with. I nervously found my way over to Abigail Woods and joined the lifestyle section at the interest meeting. Not really knowing what I wanted to write about or do, I thought a broader section that can cover anything around Auburn would be the best for me. From there, I became assistant culture editor to Sabina Crisitello, and then culture editor myself. I am currently the assistant managing editor in my junior year here at Auburn. I think back to the somewhat fearful and apprehensive lifestyle writer I was and that’s where I really see what The Plainsman has done for me. I’ve learned a lot during my time here at Auburn and I know I still have a lot left to learn, but I can already attribute my passion for writing, friends I’ll have for the rest of my life, the ability to design a page for print in five minutes and heaps of AP style knowledge wholeheartedly to The Auburn Plainsman.

The Auburn Plainsman

Editorial Board

KRISTEN CARR Editor-in-Chief

TUCKER MASSEY

SAMI GRACE DONNELLY

LILY STEWART

JACOB WATERS

HARLEE MEYDRECH

MATTHEW WALLACE

EMILY MAY

KB CARR

DANIEL LOCKE

JAC MYRICK

JOLIE BISHOP

MADIE CHAMPION

Content Editor

Operations Editor

Assistant Managing Editor Social Media Manager Community News Editor Culture Editor

PIPER BOSART

Assistant Culture Editor

Opinion Editor Sports Editor

Assistant Sports Editor Photo Editor

Podcast Editor

Graphic Design Editor

Contact Us:

SIMON CRUZ

editor@theplainsman.com admanager@theplainsman.com opinion@theplainsman.com news@theplainsman.com sports@theplainsman.com

Advertising Manager


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WELCOME

Jack West gives insight on why The Plainsman went online By KRISTEN CARR Editor-in-Chief

Just over three years ago, The Auburn Plainsman’s motto took on a new meaning for its organization. “A spirit that is not afraid” turned into the notorious headline: “A spirit that is not afraid of change”. The Plainsman stopped its weekly print editions in the early months of 2021, going from its typical Thursday print to every other week and eventually making the shift to online publishing on Feb. 25, 2021. Since that decision, online publishing became the main focus. While The Plainsman currently operates primarily online, special print editions allow for the organization to both embrace the fast-moving pace of technology while still providing and honoring the rich tradition the organization is known for. Jack West took over the position of editor-in-chief in May of 2020. While starting his leadership at the height of COVID-19 wasn’t ideal, West said the circumstances forced him to prioritize the

two most important functions of the organization. West recognized the majority of The Plainsman’s readership came from online and that many of The Plainsman’s alumni often ended up working at online publications. Proficiency in modern journalism skills was a real need for students. “Obviously we had a priority to our readers,” West said. “Our other priority was really our writers. We wanted to be able to provide authentic and truthful coverage to as many people as possible, but then we also knew that The Plainsman was a kind of learning lab for a lot of people and it was also a social space.” But as the year went on, The Plainsman had another mountain to climb. The financial outlook of the organization was failing. Falling over $20,000 into deficit, there were few solutions which were even more limited during the pandemic. Billy Ferris, assistant director for student media and advisor to The Plainsman, described his meetings with West leading up to the decision. “We looked at web ana-

lytics, several years worth of budgets and identified readership patterns to accomplish two things: first, to ensure the long term viability of The Plainsman, second meeting the needs of both Plainsman students and the student body in general,” Ferris said. Breaking the news to his staff wasn’t something West took lightly. “I distinctly remember presenting it to my managing editors at the time. That was horrifying,” West said. “Some of us were in tears because of it.” West and his staff were in the office Wednesday morning on Feb. 24 preparing to send pages off to the printer. Two different covers were prepared. One was a typical front page story layout and the other was entitled, “A spirit that is not afraid of change.” When it was time to make the call, West told his team, “All right, we’ve got to be in this. We’re at the point of no return here.” When the news came out, there were mixed reactions. There were those who missed the weekly tradition of a paper in the stands, while oth-

ers were excited for the possibilities of moving to a digital news outlet. “We knew we were changing something that was very old that frankly, we had built our friendship around. And like, these were my managing editors, but they were also like my best friends at the time,” West said. “I think a lot of people, specifically people who had been a part of The Plainsman themselves, were just expressing the same kind of grief that we were feeling,” West said. West said he never intended on leaving a legacy, just living up to those who came before him. As EIC, there is typically only one year to articulate and bring the vision for the organization to life. In order to leave lasting change, West said he needed to gain a certain amount of “buy-in” from the rest of the organization. “Thanks to Jack and his team’s dedication and responsibility, The Plainsman was able to make the shift to digital and set up long term success,” Ferris said. “It’s not an understatement to say that

CONTRIBUTED BY JACK WEST

Jack West was editor-in-chief of The Plainsman in 2021.

Jack West saved The Plainsman at a time it needed saving.” West is currently living in Manhattan and recently began a doctorate program at NYU, a goal he’s had since middle school. He’s hoping to stay in academia and become a professor. West said he has always been inspired

Plainsman Comics | Who’s the mascot?

by people who teach at the collegiate level, specifically several history professors at Auburn. “You want to preserve the sense of community that it has, you want to preserve the level of journalistic excellence that it has,” West said. “The Plainsman has always been more than a newspaper.”

MADIE CHAMPION | GRAPHIC DESIGN EDITOR


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A Letter from SGA

A Sneak Peak into the Vault

Serve, promote, unify. Three words that have captured the hearts and attitudes of the Student Government Association’s members since its creation in 1922. This year, we are celebrating 101 years of Auburn SGA. 101 Years of creating and passing legislation in favor of the individual student. 101 Years of electing officers to advocate for a meaningful student experience. And 101 years of hosting events that connect our student body further with the Auburn community and family. SGA has played a meaningful role since the beginning. Featured above in photos are time capsule moments that exemplify the heart of SGA. From creating a software to organize one’s schedule, entitled Tiger Scheduler, to creating moments of greeting strangers by name during Hey Day, SGA has been an integral part in countless ways. Join us as we dive into the three core values that make up one of Auburn’s longest running organizations. Serve. The Student Government Association embodies the spirit of selfless service by cultivating the human touch. Years ago, SGA hosted the first International Festival featuring a multi-cultural parade and dishes from a handful of countries and regions. SGA members work tirelessly to advocate for every student’s experience.

Promote. As a voice for the Student Body, SG works to amplify each student’s individual voice to provide more opportunities for students ensuring that every student’s perspective is heard and utilized. Representatives actively engage with university administration to voice students' concerns, lobby for policy changes, and advocate for improvements across Auburn’s campus. Unify. Through programming, outreach, and initiatives that provide support for all students, Auburn SGA works to create community, belonging, and unity within Auburn’s campus. As members of the Auburn Family, we strive to cultivate an environment that is inclusive, encouraging, and empowering to each member of our university.

male First fe sident re SGA p

Serving and promoting the individual student; Unifying all that is Auburn – that is our passion. To the University, we are thankful to be a part of an institution that seeks excellence in every aspect of service to the community. To The Plainsman, we would like to take this opportunity to offer congratulations on the 130th edition. We applaud your hard work, consistency and passion for Auburn University. Lastly, to the student body. Upon accepting your place as a student here at the loveliest village on the plains, you became a member of the Student Government Association. SGA exists for the individual student — for you. Thank you for the privilege of serving you.

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WELCOME

Past editor-in-chiefs recount their Jim Bullington, 1961-1962 Jim Bullington came from a family with a background of what he described as “a combination of Alabama redneck and east Tennessee hillbilly.” However, in 1957, Bullington became the first in his family to attend college and just a few years later, became The Plainsman’s editor-in-chief in May 1961. Bullington was editor during a volatile time in the Civil Rights Movement, particularly in Alabama. He said prior to the Freedom Riders movement of 1961 – a movement that protested the segregation of public transportation – he had never given much thought to civil rights. However, he considered his revelations following the Freedom Riders movement to epiphanic. Bullington wrote a front-page editorial denouncing white mobs that attacked Freedom Riders throughout Alabama. The front page was coined an “irresponsible radical” by former Auburn University President Ralph Brown Draughon, who ordered The Plainsman to submit all future editorials to the dean of student affairs. The editorial was not stifled by threats from the University and was picked up by national outlets like the Washington Post and New York Times. This act drew the anger of former Alabama Governor John Patterson but would help encourage lasting change in Auburn’s student body and the University as a whole. Through the pushback, threats and vitriol hurled in Bullington’s direction, he proudly stood by his work and embodied The Plainsman’s motto: “A spirit that is not afraid.” CONTRIBUTED BY JIM BULLINGTON

John Carvalho, 1977-1978 In 1977, John Carvalho – a future professor in Auburn University’s School of Communication and Journalism – became the editor-in-chief of The Plainsman. Carvalho noted the importance of student newspapers and how he sought to make The Plainsman a beacon of quality, relevant reporting for Auburn’s students and community. “My goal as editor was to see The Plainsman maintained as a trusted campus voice, where anyone could bring news and it would be reported,” Carvalho said. “We often had individuals walk through the doors and ask that their problems be addressed in the paper, and we were glad to report on it.” Carvalho also viewed The Plainsman as a source of camaraderie and a space to build long-lasting friendships and memories. He said that when he worked with the same people weekly to craft the paper, he was able to form bonds with his coworkers and enjoyed the social atmosphere the office provided. Carvalho has continued his involvement with The Plainsman through his involvement in The Plainsman Endowment and organization of various alumni functions. CONTRIBUTED BY JOHN CARVALHO


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WELCOME

memories at The Auburn Plainsman Alec Harvey, 1983-1984 Alec Harvey became editor-in-chief of The Plainsman in 1983, a year in which Auburn’s sports programs – particularly football under the leadership of former head football coach Pat Dye – saw a turning point, with the football team going 11-1 on the season and finishing No. 3 in the nation. Harvey said that his goal as editor was to not build a legacy of his own, perse; rather, he wanted to carry on and uphold the legacy left to him – a legacy he felt “had already been built.” “At the time, it was less about leaving a legacy than it was trying not to disparage the legacy that had already been built,” Harvey said. “The Plainsman’s history is a storied one, and that in itself brings a bit of pressure to those who work there.” Harvey’s story with The Plainsman did not end in 1984. From 2015 to 2020, Harvey served as The Plainsman’s advisor, and he said he was still in awe of the work the staff he oversaw put into their work and the legacy they left behind.

CONTRIBUTED BY ALEC HARVEY

Corey Williams, 2015-2016 From 2015 to 2016, Corey Williams was The Plainsman’s editor-in-chief. During this time, she covered the 2016 election of former President Donald Trump and its aftermath, including how it was received on campus. Williams wrote about issues such as student mental health and the short-lived presidency of former Auburn University President Steven Leath – coverage that Williams noted was controversial but said she was proud of today. One of Williams’ favorite stories she covered during her time as editor-in-chief was the fire on Toomer’s Corner, which occured after Auburn’s win over LSU in 2016. Williams, who was in Birmingham at the time, raced back to Auburn to cover the story and “spent the next 72 hours in The Plainsman office.” Among her favorite memories at The Plainsman, Williams, like many others, cherished the friendships she made along the way and the lessons she learned from her fellow editors and writers. Through it all, Williams said she always tried to keep The Plainsman’s motto – a spirit that is not afraid – in mind in all that she did. She said with it in mind every day, she sought to build a legacy that future editors could reflect on for years to come. CONTRIBUTED BY COREY WILLIAMS


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OPINION

COLUMN | The 60th anniversary of racial intergration at Auburn University By JAKAI SPIKES Columnist

This year marks the 60th anniversary of racial integration at Auburn University. Putting it into perspective, 60 years was really not that long ago. People who get to experience the “new normal” of integration at Auburn University have grandparents that would not have been able to attend the University. Harold Franklin Jr. was the first African American to become an Auburn student on Jan. 4, 1964. Auburn has made progress since desegregating. Auburn as a community, however, still has a ways to go. Segregation is different from racism. Segregation has been outlawed, but racist tendencies can still persist. Auburn has expressed its efforts to continue to spread awareness and prevent racism and its segregationist history from repeating itself. The Office of Inclusion and Diversity focuses on encouraging diversity, networking and

giving opportunities. It’s important to learn while creating a safe place for all. Even though our school is integrated now, we must continue to educate ourselves on the history of racism in this country and how it has affected people of color. Education is what puts an end to history from repeating itself. Now in 2023, students have the ability to break generational curses and try to set a better example of how the world should be and how people should treat each other. On top of that, it’s important that we are sensitive to microaggressions because those have just as negative of an impact although they might seem more hidden and minor. On June 11, 1963, Alabama Governor George Wallace said, “Segregation now. Segregation tomorrow. Segregation forever.” This quote is haunting even though Wallace is long since out of office. Unfortunately, there are still people who believe African Americans and other people of color are of a lower class, dangerous and un-

worthy. This is an issue of ideology, and it has to stop. The color of your skin or where your ancestors are from is not indicative of social class or human worth. So, on this 60th anniversary of racial integration, a practical tip is to look at your friend group. Are they a diverse group of people? It’s important to make sure you are surrounded by people that aren’t all like you. CHASE TAYLOR | PHOTOGRAPHER This will allow you to Auburn students put fists together at Samford Hall on Sept. 29, 2023. emerse yourself in different cultures and open yourself to new ex- only because it will create a healthy environperiences. ment of inclusion, but it will also strengthen Make sure you’re doing these things not your character as an individual.

COLUMN | An international student’s perspective on a new culture

MADISON CHAMPION | GRAPHIC DESIGN EDITOR

By ALBA SINUSIA LOZANO Columnist

New culture: a window for new opportunities. Leaving your home country does not mean you are forced to run away from your traditions, but it opens a window of opportunities to adapt to a new culture and unlock new perspectives. After sharing your last goodbyes with your family and loved ones, you got onto that plane and, after endless hours of binge-watching the worst TV show you could ever encounter, arrived in a whole new world.

The first few days, it might seem that the jet lag is winning over your body, so you will probably look like a real-life zombie with sleep deprivation. Been there, done that. However, those days pass soon after. Regardless of your homeland, the feeling of alienation from the community will probably arrive sooner or later. My very first piece of advice would be: you do not have to push yourself into things you are not comfortable with. I, as a Spaniard, find it completely impossible to have dinner before 9 p.m. even though I have tried to adapt to the American schedule. However, I am about to share a secret with you: it is fine. It is fine not to adopt other people’s ways of living in your life. Auburn University offers many international organizations you can join if you feel out of place or are just craving to speak your own language. For instance, the International Student Organization holds a “social hour” every Friday where they serve free food and students from other countries explain their ways of living. Through Auburn’s involvement website – AU Involve – you can see the organization’s

details as well as other ISO events where you will have the chance to stay in contact with people from your home country and with other international students who are dealing with the same concerns you are. But have you left your home country just to keep past patterns on repeat forever? Whether you have come to study or to work, there is something we all share: we have come to learn, and we have come to experience. You will never know if you like the U.S. schedule unless you try it for a while, just as you will never know if you turn out to be the

biggest mac and cheese fan unless you try it sometime with an open mind. You will never find the best version of yourself unless you experience every opportunity life offers you to grow as a person. Good news for you: there is no rush; you can choose your own pace. But never stop challenging yourself, and never stop walking towards new perspectives. The U.S. sun is now rising to brighten the Plains; its rays are gently tapping on your window. The only thing you have to do is allow them to wake you.

KAT DIETZ | PHOTOGRAPHER

Photo of the international flags in the Melton Student Center on Sept. 26, 2023.


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EDITORIAL | Old Auburn versus new Auburn: still the loveliest village? By SAMI GRACE DONNELLY Opinion Editor

Our city was founded in 1836. The name Auburn and the phrase “The Loveliest Village on the Plains” comes from a poem titled “The Deserted Village.” It was published in 1770 by Oliver Goldsmith. The poem presents that happiness is not found in powerful economics. True loveliness comes from within the village and everything it stands for. The poem’s 11 pages of rhyme and rhythm affirm the message that the village is not lovely because of the external opulence it brings from afar. Power, greed and overextension always lead to discontentment, corruption and destruction. The opening line reads, “Sweet Auburn, loveliest village of the plain.” Throughout the poem, characteristics like smiling, health, innocence, ease, humility, happiness and charm are attributed to Auburn. These are very applicable to what we understand the city of Auburn to be, and it’s no wonder why we have fostered such an attachment to this archaic

poem and its words. Auburn is historic and has an abundance of rich and charming heritage. We are a town marked by simple pleasures: family, agriculture, education, hard work, good character, classy gamedays, unique traditions, natural beauty, orange and blue sunsets, Toomer’s lemonade and so many wholesome trademarks. We believe in Auburn and love it. That’s a refrain dear to every citizen’s — and student’s — heart. Over the past 187 years, Auburn has developed while still remaining faithful to its character and purpose. It has urbanized and expanded to invite and include more people into its loveliness. Auburn has remained Auburn from the founding of a university 20 years after the city’s establishment to the construction of a multi-million dollar football facility. Our town has been our town from the first cabin to the most modern Publix on East University Drive. From pharmacy to souvenir shop — Toomer’s Drugs to Toomer’s Corner — we have proven to be adaptable to the times while always remaining fearless and true to who we are.

We have grown and developed. We are not the 19th century village we once were, but we are still Auburn. This is why dramatic and capricious acts of urbanization ruffle so many feathers. The city of Auburn has recently approved plans for an apartment complex with units starting at $2 million, directly across from Toomer’s Drugs. It disrupts the heartbeat of

the culture, interrupts the aesthetic of the downtown area and threatens to trade a modest culture for lavish economic gain. Motives must be called into question. Is this best for the community? Who is the target audience for these apartments? Can the general demographic of Auburn afford these units? Why does it have to be in the heart of downtown? Will it push out loyal citizens who cannot keep

up with inflating economics? They will most likely be gameday condos purchased by rich fans and inhabited for a few weekends out of the year — not for students, although that location would be prime, nor for families, although downtown is usually so accommodating for family lifestyles. Not all modern extensions are bad, however. For example, the Graduate Hotel in construction on West Magnolia Avenue will be a service to the community. This project has marketed itself as “inspired by local history and campus legends” and is even using brick to match the university’s campus. This project is expensive and will take the place of a beloved Auburn site, Anders Bookstore. However, it is a welcome development because it has communicated a desire to be a part of the town and the family that is Auburn. The apartment project on the corner of College Street and Magnolia Avenue has not communicated that message. It MADISON CHAMPION | GRAPHIC EDITOR has not been well received A graphic representing the apartment complex being built downtown. by the community, and it seems like more of a mon-

ey grab than a contribution to our town. If the city continues to move forward with this plan, it will undeniably affect the smalltown atmosphere. Auburn has shown itself capable of taking on modernizations, but $2 million apartments stray too far from its core values and character. Like Goldsmith said in his poem, wisdom and faithfulness to one’s character are more important than “trade’s proud empire” which “hastes to swift decay.” Modernization should not be empire building. It should be for the greater good, to preserve and strengthen the great values that are already there — not bring in unfamiliar aggrandizements that clash with and overshadow identity. Urbanization of our town has been good, but this new development is taking a different, startling direction. Its presence right across from Auburn’s crown jewel poses a looming threat to everything Auburn stands for. We need to remain true to our core values if we want to continue as the Loveliest Village on the Plains. Otherwise, we will urbanize ourselves into obsolescence.

COLUMN | How working at The Auburn Plainsman inspired me By MALLORIE McCOY Columnist

The Auburn Plainsman is the most decorated collegiate newspaper in history, having received numerous awards from from conference superlatives to 26 National Pacemaker Awards. Our entirely student-run and self-funded publication has undeniable accolades. The influence of The Plainsman is widespread and deep. We have created real change at our university and in our culture. We have encouraged and inspired countless students, staff and alumni. To us — the writers, editors and behindthe-scenes heroes — however, The Plainsman

means even more, and this year we celebrate 130 years of our beloved newspaper. I remember receiving my acceptance email to become an official member of The Plainsman. It was my sophomore year, and I was excited to direct my studies in journalism toward a real publication. After college, I knew I wanted to pursue some form of fashion media. I didn’t know if there would be a place for writing like that in my student newspaper. However, my fears and reservations were met with brainstorming and open minds. After speaking with a few different people on The Plainsman staff, I began to work with the opinion editor to create a column entitled “Dressing up for games is the southern way.”

This experience confirmed my purpose and direction of career. I realized with legitimate proof that my dreams were attainable, and I could do it for the rest of my life. The Plainsman is where I found my footing as a young writer, and it is the first media outlet to publish my work. Now, as a senior about to graduate with a Bachelor of Arts in Journalism, I reflect on how this newspaper has shaped me as a journalist and how it continues to inspire me daily. I’ve been given an outlet to create. I’ve been given an opportunity to learn the ins and outs of of my craft. I’ve been given confidence in my writing abilities. I’ve been given space to share my ideas and

thoughts openly. I’ve been given a platform and audience for my voice to be heard. This newspaper reassures me there is still a burning passion within the journalism community, and it has instilled in me the values of what it means to be a journalist. With my time at The Plainsman soon coming to an end, I will take its principles and all the lessons I’ve learned from it as I step into my journalistic endeavors. The Auburn Plainsman inspires me to inspire others through the outlet of journalism. This organization holds a special place in my heart, and — based on everything it’s done in the past 130 years — I know it will continue to do the same for generations to come.


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OPINION

COLUMN | When silence spoke ‘Lowder’ than words By NOAH GRIFFITH News Writer

On the final Thursday morning of the 1998 Auburn University fall semester, students lined up to claim their copy of the latest release of The Auburn Plainsman – only to see a gaping, white front page that left campus buzzing. “I really wanted people to think, ‘Wow, they made a big mistake. They didn’t hit paste. They didn’t copy over their story. Look at those idiots,’” said Lee Davidson Holt, 1998-99 editor-in-chief of The Plainsman. “The headline and the pull-out quotes told the story.” The unfilled page was the product of 1999 Auburn journalism graduate, then known as Davidson, approaching Auburn Trustee Robert Lowder at two consecutive Auburn Board of Trustees meetings, shaking his hand, looking him in the eyes and politely asking him for an interview. “Speak Lowder, we can’t hear you” was the headline, and the pull-out quotes gave Lowder’s response to Holt’s

CONTRIBUTED BY AUBURN UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Front page of The Plainsman on Dec. 3, 1998.

sincere request. “Until you learn some manners, I will not talk to you,” Lowder replied at the Nov. 19 Auburn Commission meeting. “Young lady, I do not want anything to do with you.” Giving Lowder a chance at repentance before The Plainsman took action, Davidson inquired yet again at the Board of Trustees meeting the following night – getting the same result. “You have blasted my mother and my father, and you have been very discourteous, and I don’t intend to speak to you,” Lowder said. Lowder granted interviews to other media outlets – Birmingham News and Huntsville Times – but refused comment to Davidson and The Plainsman staff as a result of previous reporting and editorial content published by The Plainsman that Lowder didn’t like. In the name of transparency, Davidson outlined the exact dates and times when they asked Lowder for interviews in an editor’s note at the bottom of the page. In a story later in that Dec. 3 paper, Davidson fully outlined her encounters and mannerisms in dealing with Lowder and formatting that issue’s cover page in a story titled “Blank space emphasizes importance.” Holt recalled doing previous reporting on then-Auburn University President William Van Muse and his intention to merge the nursing school, the degradation of the aviation management program, Lowder’s role in the 1998 resignation of head football coach Terry Bowden, running editorials on program cuts, publishing an editorial titled “Bobby Lowder: AU is not for sale” and a story written by Davidson in November 1998 titled “Lowder University crumbles.” These articles were critical, undoubtedly, but none of the content was legally punishable or defamous because it aired on the side of independence, transparency and truth. It was simply good, hard-hitting, clean journalism that people weren’t accustomed to from student papers. “The Auburn spirit represents truth, and we represent truth,” Holt said. “We’re not being down on Auburn by investigating Auburn; we’re showing we love Auburn by investigating Auburn.” As Sallie Owen of the Dadeville Record wrote in her January 1999 piece, “Newspapers are simply mirrors,” The Plainsman’s reporting held a mirror in front of Auburn – illuminating negatives that it didn’t want to be publicized. That is a responsibility of the press, student or not, but Davidson was punished for it. “Being irresponsible in several situations regarding the news and editorial content concerning Robert Lowder’s role on the Auburn University Board of Trustees” was the reasoning given by the Auburn University Communications Board for the 5-4 vote to censure Davidson and remove her from office of The Plainsman EIC, according to Ed Williams, who served as The Plainsman’s faculty advisor at the time. As it is now, The Plainsman was then a self-support-

ing, financially independent organization, which paid rent for its office space in Foy Student Union Building at the time. It had not received Student Government Association funding since 1984, Williams added. Not only were they financially independent, but she and other staff members reported on fully staff-driven content – meaning they were not restricted, censored or advised by the university or even The Plainsman’s advisor. In fact, Holt noted that Williams didn’t read the paper until it was distributed on Thursday mornings “like everyone else.” Williams agreed. The communication board attempted to censor The Plainsman, an independent organization that they had little or no affiliation with. And truth was not at debate – it was simply that the board didn’t like what Davidson said. “And that’s the cool thing about it – a lot of people said ‘We don’t agree with your opinion.’ No one said ‘Your facts are wrong,’” Holt said. But there’s a reason why The Plainsman abides by the motto “A spirit that is not afraid.” Davidson set an example for her student media successors. She fought back against the censure by bringing in legal help, and the board immediately reversed the vote. “I do not think the five communications board members who voted for the censure had any idea of the furor that their actions would create,” Williams wrote in a 1999 column in the Associated Press. “Never (in 23 years as faculty adviser) was I associated with college journalists with more maturity, drive, courage and conviction than that 1998-99 Auburn Plainsman editor and her staff. “Lee Davidson was accompanied to the board meeting by Montgomery attorney Dennis Bailey, Auburn journalism graduate, hired by The Auburn Plainsman to represent her… The meeting was quickly adjourned when Lee walked into the room with legal counsel.” It is moments of bravery like these that have allowed The Plainsman to be what it is today. It was a scene of growth and learning for everyone involved, and it is one that keeps on teaching. “Never in my 23 years as faculty advisor of The Plainsman did I experience a year that demonstrated so clearly the importance of student media and freedom of the press,” Williams said. “Student discussions ensued on government censorship, freedom of the press, the protection that is provided by the First Amendment and the awesome responsibilities that come with that protection.” The Plainsman lived on to write about it, and it only got stronger because of the trying situation. The next month, The Plainsman wrote about the injustices of the attempted censorship in “Comm Board to crumble.” This time, the front page was as full as ever, and people raided the newspaper racks to read it on that February Thursday morning all the same. “Newspaper staffers wore t-shirts with the First Amendment printed on the back,” Williams said. “Underneath, ‘Read The Auburn Plainsman.’”


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CULTURE

Quentin Riggins elected as first Black president pro tempore of Board of Trustees By TUCKER MASSEY Content Editor

CONTRIBUTED BY AUBURN UNIVERSITY

In 1987, Quentin Riggins made his way onto the Plains as a linebacker for the football team. Riggins was recruited by colleges throughout the southeast, but after taking a trip to Auburn on a recruiting trip prior, he made up his mind. Thirty years later, however, Riggins found himself in a position within the university that was quite a contrast from the football helmet and shoulder pads he donned back then. In 2017, Riggins began serving on Auburn University’s Board of Trustees. Moving forward nearly seven years, Riggins found himself in an unprecedented position. After serving as the board’s vice president pro tempore, Riggins was nominated and unanimously elected as the first Black president pro tempore of the board. “Any time that you’re the first in

any capacity – whether it’s first Black president pro tem of the board or first woman trustee or president pro tem or first graduate in your household – any time you have a first, I think you have to hold yourself to a higher standard,” Riggins said. “You have to pay attention to what you do, how you do it, how you communicate with people, and in this role, you have set an example.” Riggins said part of his call to serve came out of a love for Auburn. He said when you have truly found your passion, it is not a burden to serve that passion. It is not a two-way street, according to Riggins – if you love something, you don’t seek anything in return for your service. “If you’re doing something because you love the subject or because you care about the interest that you’re in, you’re not seeking anything in return, and the service is enough for you,” Riggins said. Riggins served as vice president pro tem for a year before trustee Raymond J. Harbert, namesake of the

Harbert College of Business, nominated him as president pro tem and was seconded by trustee Liz Huntley. Following his nomination, the board voted and elected Riggins unanimously. “When your colleagues hold you in high esteem and trust you can lead them, lead the university as a whole, it means a lot,” Riggins said. “It means that you’ve helped yourself out, you’ve done something in a positive way that they believe you could be the right person that can lead.” Riggins said that as president pro tem, he does not know when he will “pass the baton.” In the meantime, however, he said that he would “work like a dog” and enjoy his time as president pro tem. “When you look at serving in any capacity at Auburn – especially when you’re on the alumni board, you’re on the foundation board, you’re on the Board of Trustees – if you love your institution, then it is rewarding to give back,” Riggins said. “For me, there’s no greater feeling.”

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Evolution of boutiques in downtown Auburn By SAM VISE Culture Writer

Finding the right place to shop for clothing can be a difficult task. Luckily, downtown Auburn is home to many fashion-forward boutiques. From long-term staples such as Behind the Glass or brand new shops like The Tiny Closet, downtown Auburn is the place to shop. Downtown provides a variety of boutiques all with unique merchandise and backgrounds. Behind the Glass, downtown’s oldest boutique, first opened its doors in 1987. Its mission is to help women find the perfect outfit to create confidence and power. What first began as a café and clothing store, formerly known as Tara and Behind the Glass, has evolved into the largest boutique downtown, according to store manager Chloe Floyd. “Having a boutique in downtown Auburn is really special. We’re very, very lucky to be so close to the campus, and we just have such amazing and nice customers,” Floyd said. “We get a lot of foot traffic, and we’re very spoiled that way that we have so many college students.”

Ellie Clothing storefront in downtown Auburn.

Since the café closed in 1998, Behind the Glass has expanded its clothing selection and houses two stories worth of merchandise. “What really sets us aside is the sheer square footage that we have. We can provide more head-to-toe options and many different aesthetics for customers of all ages,” Floyd said, regarding how Behind the Glass sticks out among other boutiques. Since Behind the Glass is the oldest of the downtown boutiques, it has seen a lot of change over the years. According to Floyd, though, the same sense of community has and will always be there. Co-owner of Ellie Clothing Kelly Poole has also noticed changes in the way people shop. “Obviously, there’s a lot more condos and things now than there used to be. But I feel like the biggest change has been social media. People can now take a look on social media before they come inside, whereas people used to have to come in to look at things,” Poole said. Ellie Clothing opened in November 2003 and is home to a wide variety of women’s clothing, shoes and accessories. Its goal is to provide trendy, yet affordable, clothing

EMILY MEUNCH | PHOTOGRAPHER

Charming Oaks storefront in downtown Auburn.

to women of all ages with its target market being college students. “Owning a boutique downtown is fun. There is such a variety of customers, from college students to parents to people touring the campus – it’s a good mix,” Poole said. While its merchandise is geared towards game days, Poole wants customers to know that they provide a variety of merchandise to women of all ages and sizes. Fab’rik is another boutique that appeals to women of all ages. It opened its doors on May 17, 2018, according to store owner Tanya Fuller. “Owning a boutique in downtown Auburn is phenomenal, and I love it. I wanted to open a store here because downtown is so special to me,” Fuller said. “It’s a great place to be, and it really brings people together, especially on game days.” EMILY MEUNCH | PHOTOGRAPHER While Fab’rik is

a chain boutique with locations across the south, Fuller likes to provide a unique experience that sets her store aside from others. “Because I am older, my boutique has clothing for women my age or older and the college age. I feel like we have a vast assortment of all ages here, so that helps out a lot. Our customer service, also, is like no other,” Fuller said. Charming Oaks also prides itself on its vast assortment of merchandise. “My largest selling point is that, I think, we have the largest inventory and the best inventory – and our prices are great. That’s a big selling point for college students, especially,” said store owner Shelby Cohan. Charming Oaks opened in August 2016. Its mission is to provide a variety of merchandise at an affordable price since its target market is also college students. “We want to be a place where people can come in and enjoy shopping without being pressured. Downtown Auburn is such a special place to own a business,” Cohan said. Cohan has also noticed how social media has impacted downtown shopping, and she wishes that people would support small, local businesses rather than online powerhouses. The boutiques of downtown Auburn have certainly evolved over the years, but one thing remains the same: the desire to provide trendy, affordable clothing to women of all ages and sizes.


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Love on the Plains: the Auburn connection By MARY GRACE HICKS Culture Writer

One of Auburn’s deepest traditions is that tudents are continuously finding love within the Auburn family and instilling their love for Auburn into the next generation. Auburn’s vibrant campus has witnessed countless love stories that have transcended time and distance, lasting for years to come. Whether it was in the Haley Center, a fraternity party or through mutual friends, Auburn alumni recount their first meetings with fondness, both for their alma mater and for their lifelong partners. Rachael Wickliffe from Trussville, Alabama, studied wildlife ecology and management during her time at Auburn. Rachael and her husband, Gavin Wickliffe, met at a Delta Chi fraternity party where they instantly hit it off. “It was like the typical college love story,” Rachael said. Gavin added that he had seen Rachael around the house before but thought she was out of his league. After getting to know one another, one thing led to another and Rachael and Gavin started officially dating. Rachael graduated in 2017 and Gavin in 2019. The two got

hitched in February of 2022. Auburn alumni both young and old recount their fond memories in the Loveliest Village, reflecting on their time in Auburn and how it shaped their respective relationships. Carol Colbert is from Montgomery, Alabama, and was a member of Auburn’s accounting class of 1974. Carol was an undergraduate student when she met her husband Timothy Colbert, a veterinary student, in the very heart of Auburn’s campus — the Haley Center. “You know, we were going through the drop and add period and what have you, and I saw some fellas in Haley Center,” Colbert said. At the time, she didn’t know that the group of boys were veterinary students. As they had small talk, the boys invited her to their party that evening. “They were having a party in a trailer park on Wire Road that night and asked me if I wanted to come, and I said sure,” Carol said. Before the end of the night, Timothy was asking one of his friends who Carol was. Carol and Timothy went on their first date, which was a booming success, and the rest was history. The love birds got married on June 8, 1974, two days after Timothy

CONTRIBUTED BY CAROL AND TIMOTHY COLBERT

Carol and Timothy Colbert together in 1977.

graduated from Auburn’s School of Veterinary Medicine. The Colberts had five children together, sent four of them to Auburn and are starting to see their grandchildren become Auburn Tigers. “Now we’re starting a third generation. It’s wonderful. It’s been good, and God has taken care of us all along the way. There have been lots of ups and downs, like everybody’s life. But, I mean, we’ll bleed orange and blue our whole life,” Carol said. As couples reminisce on their simple beginnings on the Plains, many recall how blue and orange stars brought them together. Jenny and Stan French met at Auburn in 1994. Jenny was studying nursing, and Stan was a pre-med student. Stan lived next to Jenny’s roommate’s boyfriend, and they were introduced not long after the start of their sophomore year. After the introduction, the pair realized they had both theater and anatomy classes together. Their theater class was seated alphabetically, where the two were placed next to each other. Soon after, the two attended an Auburn basketball game together as their first date. This blossomed into a five-year relationship and an eventual proposal outside of

the Beard-Eaves-Memorial Coliseum. Each milestone had a tie to the Auburn community, with Jenny reminiscing on each and every one of their great memories at Auburn. Stan studied medicine at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and the couple moved to Montgomery, Alabama, together where they still reside today. The French family now consists of four children: Lauren, Hayley, Morgan and Luke. Lauren graduated from Auburn in May 2022 with a degree in biomedical sciences and a minor in French, while Hayley is a current Auburn student studying exercise science on the pre-physical therapy track. With their younger two still in middle and high school, the Frenchs are doing everything they can to raise the next generation of Tigers, with Jenny adding that she “hopes Morgan and Luke will attend Auburn too.” As couples continue to reminisce on their beginnings, it is evident that the Auburn connection runs deeper than the blue and orange hues that adorn Auburn’s campus. It is a connection that brings people together, forging bonds that last a lifetime and continue to inspire the next generation to become proud Auburn Tigers.

CONTRIBUTED BY CAROL AND TIMOTHY COLBERT

Carol and Timothy Colbert together in present day.


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What Auburn means to President Christopher B. Roberts By LANI SHIVERS

especially electric ones. He grew up in his dad’s music store, so music quickly became one of his passions. Though he found other passions Auburn means the world to many students, in college, music remains a driving force in his alumni and others living in the small college life. town. To Auburn University President Chris“One of the things that I really think is great topher B. Roberts, it means everything. about Auburn is that if you’re an engineer on Roberts has been a part of Auburn Universi- this campus, you can experience the arts,” Robty for much longer than his 16 months of pres- erts said. “You can experience theater. You can idency. After growing up in Ste. Genevieve, experience a lot of different things, and if you’re Missouri, attending college at the University a student in the arts, you get to [interact] with of Missouri and completing his master’s and people that are working in other disciplines.” doctorate at The University of Notre Dame, he He continued to explain at Auburn, there made Auburn home. are no limits to the different passions students Originally, his heart lay in chemical engi- can have as they learn and find out who they neering where he became an assistant profes- are. sor at Auburn in 1994 and department chair “I love the fact that at Auburn we have pockin 2003. In 2012, Roberts became the Dean of ets of excellence in all of our colleges that allow the College of Engineering, and then president our student bodies to really get a well-rounded of Auburn University in May 2022. education both inside their major and outside When asked about his typical day as presi- their major, based on the people they interface dent, Roberts claimed he loved the variety and [interact] with,” Roberts said. opportunities each day brings. However, it is not all about the time in the “Every day is different,” Roberts said. “That’s classroom and merely interacting with one’s the most beautiful part of this job. Every day major that Roberts believes is important; he is different, and it’s filled with opportunities to believes that a good education encompasses a engage with the Auburn family.” variety of things. He gave an example of the day before; he Roberts explained how education occurs was in a meeting in Washington D.C. with the just as much in the community as it does on legislative delegation in order to thank them for campus or inside the classroom itself. their assistance and share with them what was When taking a step back to look at all of happening on campus. Roberts’ years as a part of Auburn, he explained A tidbit about Roberts that many do not that while some things about Auburn have know is that he loves to play and collect guitars, changed, there are certain aspects that have remained consistent and fundamental. “I love the fact that we remain very rooted and true to the values that are expressed in the Auburn Creed…The passion that Auburn people have for their university has remained very, very true to me through all of these years that I’ve been here at Auburn,” Roberts said. “The sense of community and family – the Auburn family – means everything to me. That has all been very consistent throughout the KATIE PETITT | PHOTOGRAPHER years I’ve been here at Aubie the Tiger celebrating with Christopher and Tracy Roberts after Auburn.” putting a hole-in-one at Pizza & Popsicles with the President on Sept. However, he has 13, 2023. also witnessed AuCulture Writer

FILE PHOTO

Auburn President Christopher B. Roberts speaking at the NPHC plaza launch on Sept. 30, 2022.

burn change during his time here on the Plains through various avenues of growth. “I’ve also seen Auburn evolve over this timeframe into a powerhouse of an institution... we’ve done that by staying true to our values but working hard on the things that improve people’s lives, drive our economy and advance our society and providing exceptional experiences to our students in order to be able to do those things,” Roberts said. He believes it is important to remain true to the values and beliefs that make Auburn unique, but also understands that Auburn can and will always aim to grow and improve for the greater good of the community and its people. Throughout his time at Auburn, Roberts has watched different programs of research and academia grow along with the now-diverse student body. He believes Auburn has found the balance of staying true to who it is while still learning to evolve to become a stronger institution that impacts people for the better. “Through the years that I’ve been at Auburn, I’ve really learned about three things that I believe to be fundamental, and I share them with just about anybody I can,” Roberts said. His first goal is to make sure that Auburn provides exceptional experiences both inside and outside of the classroom. This enables students to transform academic success into lifelong success. That lifelong success can then be used to advocate for and help the people around them. His second goal is to ensure that all scholarly work done through Auburn is done with a spirit that is advancing and impactful. Lastly, Roberts explained the importance of

exhibiting a culture of excellence and innovation throughout all of these things. Speaking to the student body, Roberts said, “Spend time with us. We’ve worked really hard on this campus to put programs in place to provide support and to provide encouragement and to enable students to be successful. But, many of those programs are only impactful if you’re engaged.” The engagement of students is one of Roberts’ passions. “One thing that I’ve learned is that people don’t do what they don’t want to do, and they do amazing things when they’re motivated,” he said. “I wish to engage our students so that they can be motivated about their education and about their ability to affect other people’s lives.” Roberts wants people to discover their passions and focus on them to advance both their education and character. “I like to tell people that both passion and focus are superpowers,” Roberts said. Involving Auburn’s well-known campus traditions, Roberts said that his favorite is the value and immutability of the Auburn Creed. In fact, the Creed is really what convinced him to choose Auburn. “The department chair during my interview handed me a piece of paper and said, ‘This document is very important to Auburn people.’ I read it that evening, and I fell in love with Auburn,” Roberts said. All of these traditions, values and the community that Auburn encompasses are what make Auburn special to Auburn men and women. “Auburn family: it means everything,” Roberts said.


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Elementary school teacher Laura Collard embodying the Auburn Spirit dents revisit their elementary versity was the foundation for schools for the EAGLE walk. the success in her job today. BeThey get to see their former ing an Auburn alumni makes her teachers who made an impact feel pride and appreciation. on them. Teaching young members of Collard appreciates this op- the community and being a role portunity a lot. “It gives you model for interns are ways she that little inkling of, I might hopes to honor her alma mater. have had something to do with On game days, Collard can that cap and gown.” relive her time as a student and “She believes every child share the excitement with her can and will succeed in her daughters. Having grown up in classroom,” said Mason, The California, the concept of tailgrowing diversity in her class- gating was new to her. It was the room presents a welcome chal- buzz-feeling before a football lenge for Collard to provide game that she describes as her fafairness and positivity to stu- vorite memory as a student. dents of all backgrounds. Today, she makes a habit of Not only is Auburn as a city frequenting downtown with and a population changing , her family to take in the energy but so is Auburn University. on gamedays and roll Toomer’s HANNAH RAITZ | CULTURE WRITER Collard holds that Auburn Corner. as an institution has provid“I wouldn’t be where I am Laura Collard poses with her third grade class. This is Collard’s 24th year of teaching. ed support for its students, as without the strong foundation By HANNAH RAITZ year of teaching. She left Au- remembers Laura, she was his fa- she always felt a strong sense of of Auburn University. I truly Culture Writer burn for Arizona to follow vorite teacher.” community there. She recalls hope that I’m a reflection of the her husband for a job but very Providing the kids a good ed- feeling included and supported University and the College of Laura Collard, a third grade quickly realized she wanted to ucation is just as important for during her time at the universi- Education, as well as my school, teacher at Wrights Mill Road El- come back. She described how the teacher as creating memories ty, something she would love for Wrights Mill Road,” said Colementary School, truly embod- they moved back very quickly with them. Collard explained her daughters to experience too. lard as she gets up at the end of ies the orange-and-blue spirit. and that being in Auburn is “just that her former student’s mom Collard acknolowledges that the interview. Her students hug She is an Auburn alumna who meant to be.” said her son remembers Collard her education at Auburn Uni- her and smile into the camera. values both her education and Inside the redbrick build- mostly for doing cartwheels in the opportunities that Auburn ing of Wrights Mill Road, cre- the classroom. offers its community. ative drawings and posters decIt’s important to Collard that Collard grew up in a military orated by students line the walls students appreciate the commufamily and spent most of her and colorful carpets furnish the nity they live in. A first grader childhood in San Diego. Her floors. Collard describes a fami- once asked her what tailgating family moved to Montgomery, ly-like atmosphere amongst the was, so Collard brought in tailwhich brought her closer to her faculty and talks about her pro- gate food and told the students forever home: Auburn. She felt fession with an appreciative at- to wear Auburn gear, so the class destined to be a teacher, always titude. Her colleagues’ feed- could experience it firsthand. having loved helping and be- back reflected that. “Laura loves She lit up when she talking around kids. Following this her students as if they were her ed about meeting former stucalling, she specialized in child- own,” said Amber Goolsby, Ti- dents in the community. Her hood education at Auburn Uni- tle One Teacher at Wrights Mill long-standing history in Auburn versity, where she met her hus- Road. enabled her to watch her former band, with whom she has two What Collard values the most students grow up and witness daughters. about her job are the relation- new stages in their lives, even at“I wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t ships she can build. Her students tended some of their weddings. for you,” Collard tells her stu- still express their gratitude years Wright Mill Road’s princident. She is adamant about them later and her reputation as an pal, Karen Mason, confirmed being in the picture being taken outstanding teacher even trav- this and described Collard’s crefor this article. Her appreciation els outside of Auburn. Her par- ation of “strong and positive refor the kids is visible and her ents told her about meeting Col- lationships with parents and positive energy fills the room. lard’s former student’s mother in children.” HANNAH RAITZ | CULTURE WRITER Collard is now in her 24th Montgomery, who said, “My son Every May, graduating stu- Laura Collard teaches her elementary class in September 2023.


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An Auburn staple: Toomer’s Drugs through the years By MAGGIE RANDALL Culture Writer

In 1896, Sheldon Toomer brought the infamous freshsqueezed lemonade recipe to the corner of Magnolia Avenue and College Street, Toomer’s Corner, where the notorious paw print and Toomer’s Oaks are found with a fresh layer of toilet paper snow, flowing in the wind after an Auburn victory. Toomer was a true Auburn man, a former running back for Auburn’s first football team, a graduate with degrees in pharmacy and agriculture and a former member of the Alabama House of Representatives, representing Lee County. In 1952, Toomer passed the torch to McAdory “Mac” and Elizabeth “Libba” Lipscomb, the current owners of the building. Mac and Libba Lipscomb decided the building where Toomer’s is located was in great need of restoration, which opened the doors for pharmacists Don and Betty Haisten to become owners of Auburn’s beloved Toomer’s Drugs. Don and Betty are alumni of Auburn and were both involved in Greek life. Don was a Phi Gamma Delta (Fiji) fraternity member and Betty was an Alpha Chi Omega sorority member. Betty said that when she attended Auburn, Toomer’s was not anything compared to what it is now, calling it “minimal.” After revamping the building, The Haistens opened Toomer’s back up in Oct. 1999. They updated the soda fountain, put photos representing the history of Toomer’s on the walls and refurbished the storefront to enhance its appearance. “It was so exciting. Don’s whole philosophy regarding this was, ‘We are going to restore it for the alumni and the visitors that come to town and the community. We want it to be a place where people can make memories,’” Betty said. Don passed away in 2005, but

Betty upholds his legacy within Toomer’s. “I attribute the total success to Michael,” Betty said. “Michael is the one day in, day out that makes the business decisions, for the most part, and is the face behind Toomer’s, and his wife, Michelle.” Michael Overstreet is the current manager of Toomer’s and has been since its reopening under the Haistens ownership. Overstreet has a wife and daughter who work at Toomer’s, as well. The Haistens first hired Overstreet when he was in high school. Overstreet started classes at UAB while working for The Haistens. Then, when they bought Toomer’s, they asked him to move to Auburn to become manager of the store. Overstreet said that he couldn’t pass up the opportunity because Auburn was his dream school. “My wife and I both graduated in 2002, and really just fell in love with Auburn. It’s amazing getting to actually live here and work at Toomer’s,” Overstreet said. Overstreet’s favorite part of being the manager at Toomer’s is the employees and being able to watch them grow. Overstreet said that he loves knowing that his employees will one day represent Auburn and make an impact in their future endeavors. He hopes to influence the employees the best he can and set a good example for them throughout their time as employees. “Honestly, I love it. I love my job,” Overstreet said. “It’s more than a paycheck, and it’s what I’m supposed to be doing.” COVID-19 caused the biggest changes to Toomer’s since The Haistons took over. One of which was the removal of all main food items from the menu. “It was a big thing, especially for the students and faculty, just to walk up to Toomer’s and have lunch, but we realized during COVID that it could create problems,” Betty said. Before COVID-19, during the

week, Toomer’s served lunch items such as chicken salad, tuna salad, grilled cheese, hotdogs and chips. People would come for lunch as there were also tables, chairs and stools at the fountain bar within the store. “It made me sad, but yet, it was something that gave us more freedom to do more out in the store as far as merchandise and that sort of thing,” Betty said. “It was a blessing in disguise.” Overstreet explained that Toomer’s lost most of its employees overnight due to COVID-19, but they used that opportunity to focus on apparel. He said that Betty could have made the decision to close the store, but she didn’t because it was nice to be a “small escape for the community when people just wanted some normalcy.” One of Betty’s favorite parts of Toomer’s is how long it’s been one of Auburn’s traditions. “Hopefully, it will remain an integral part of the university campus life for students for many, many years to come,” Betty said. Betty works behind the counter as many gamedays as possible and always gets excited to see customers’ faces light up when entering the store. “I’ve always wanted to be there on gameday Saturdays because it’s such an exciting time. Everybody’s so happy and thrilled to be in Auburn,” Betty said. “To be able to work with employees that work so hard all the time, I’m just happy to be there.” Betty’s favorite menu item at Toomer’s is the strawberry frozen lemonade, and she loves seeing people enjoy their lemonade in the store. “It’s fun when they take that first sip of lemonade and say, ‘Ahh. This is the very best,’ with a big smile,” Betty said. When Toomer’s first opened, Don would go to Auburn regularly to take care of the store and instruct Overstreet while Betty tended to their drugstore in Trussville, Ala-

MAGGIE BOWMAN | PHOTOGRAPHER

Toomer’s Drugs has been an Auburn staple since it was established in 1896.

bama. Betty said that Don had visions of how he could make it better, and for those six years, Auburn was “truly his happy place.” “There is certainly a sense of pride with it. It’s something that I never would’ve dreamed years ago that we would be involved with,” Betty said. Betty said she fell in love with Auburn within a month of starting classes. As a student, alumna and business owner, she said her heart is full when visiting campus. Overstreet said Auburn means much more to him now than when he was a student. Now, he feels that it’s more of a community, lifestyle and an overall “special place.” Overstreet recognized Betty for her continuous dedication to the business and her commitment to the Auburn community. He applauded her for her dependability, kindness and ability to always make time for him. Betty said that throughout the

years, one of her favorite things is still driving down College Street and knowing she’s back in Auburn. “I loved it then, and I love it now. Even with all the changes, it is still the loveliest village on the plains,” Betty said. “I can’t say enough good things about Auburn.” Betty gave all her thanks to The Lipscombs for taking a chance on her and Don. As for students and alumni, Toomer’s means everything from tradition to an iconic landmark to a symbol of Auburn’s campus. Alison Williamson, alumna who graduated with a bachelor’s degree in finance, said, “It’s the best hometown lemonade stand that exudes the traditions of Auburn.” Foster Johnson, freshman in exercise science, said, “It’s heaven on earth.” Whether it’s the tradition, the lemonade or the infamous oaks, Toomer’s Drugs will forever be at the heart of Auburn.


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Mayor Ron Anders: Auburn until the end By TUCKER MASSEY Content Editor

In 1965, the Anders family moved to Auburn and started a small business – Anders Bookstore – the following year. Nearly 60 years later, the Anders name is still a familiar one on the Plains as Ron Anders enters his sixth year as mayor. However, much more has transpired in those six decades that have led to this point in Anders’ life. Anders graduated from Auburn High School in 1982 after spending his whole life in the town, and he said growing up in Auburn formed him into who he is today. “I spent all of my childhood and all of my days here in Auburn,” Anders said. “It was wonderful. I feel like that is certainly a blessing in my life that I got to grow up here.” When Anders was growing up, he noted that Auburn was a much smaller version of the city he governs today. He estimated that the university was likely only one-third of its current size. As Anders grew up, he recalled the excitement of game days, especially football game days, which he said were always a “big deal” even when Auburn was just a fraction of the size it is today. Anders remembered the first nighttime baseball

CONTRIBUTED BY RON ANDERS

Mayor Ron Anders is currently serving his second term.

game played at Plainsman Park and the first McDonald’s to come to downtown Auburn, a move that convinced his grandfather to move Anders Bookstore closer to the heart of downtown Auburn. After spending his childhood in Auburn and graduating from Auburn High School, Anders said his next move was clear to him. “I never thought of going to school anywhere else than Auburn University,” Anders said. “It was a great experience for me.” While at the universiCONTRIBUTED BY JEREMY HENDERSON ty, Anders said he joined a fraternity, worked part A young Ron Anders hypes up Jordan-Hare as mic man in the mid-1980s. time for his family’s store and became a cheerleader during an era of athletic “Because of where I was raised, how I was raised and prominence. what I was exposed to – my parents taking me to ev“Coach Dye had just come to Auburn. He was re- ery single Auburn event back in the 70s when I was a ally changing our countenance and the way we look child – I am a consummate Auburn guy,” Anders said. at ourselves and the hope and excitement of the pro- “I love Auburn. I know Auburn’s not perfect, but I begram,” Anders said. “Bo Jackson was playing football lieve it’s the best place in the world.” for Auburn, and Charles Barkley was playing basketball for Auburn, and Frank Thomas was playing baseball for Auburn. It was just a great time to be involved in an entity that encourages student support for those activities.” Anders’ time at Auburn, in his opinion, provided him with skills that would come in handy nearly 40 years later while serving as mayor. Following graduation, Anders moved to Birmingham for a brief time to work for a bank before moving back to Auburn to continue working at his family’s business while simultaneously starting a family of his own. Throughout his time back in Auburn, Anders got involved with community service – a seed that would eventually bloom into his mayorship. Anders was part of many youth sports programs and was even around to help bring the AHSAA football championship games to Auburn. Finally, in 2012, Anders was appointed to fill a vacancy on the Auburn City Council, an appointment that would last just under two years. He was reelectCONTRIBUTED BY JEREMY HENDERSON ed in 2014 and ran for mayor in 2018, a position for Ron Anders leads the student section in cheers as mic man. which he was reelected to in 2022.


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The growth of Auburn University since the creation of The Plainsman

KARA BETH CARR | PHOTO EDITOR

Samford Hall has been a fixture of Auburn University’s campus since 1888.

By KAYLEIGH FREEMAN News Writer

As of 2023, The Auburn Plainsman has been publishing about student life, campus activities and sporting events for 130 years. With over a century of rich history, The Plainsman has watched, and reported, the evolution of Auburn University into the institution students know and love today. When The Plainsman was first published in 1893, the institution did not go by its current name. At the time, Auburn University was known as the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Alabama. This name was kept until 1899 when the institution was renamed the Alabama Polytechnic Institute. Similarly, the student newspaper also went by another name, the Orange and Blue, until 1922 when it was renamed to The Plainsman. In 1960, the institution was finally renamed to what it is today: Auburn University. Today, Auburn University is one of Alabama’s largest public universities, but the enrollment statistics were not always so high. Student enrollment was first reported in 1897 in volume VI, issue II of the Orange and Blue, according to a digitized archive from the Auburn University Libraries. As of Oct. 27, 1897, the student enrollment at the Agricultural and Mechanical College was 312 students. As of fall 2022, the 2023-24 Auburn Bulletin reported that Auburn University had a to-

tal of 31,764 students — over 100 times the amount from 1897. This number only seems to be growing, as the university received over 48,000 applications for fall 2023, a record number of applicants, as stated in an article published by the Office of Communications and Marketing. By looking at student enrollment over the years, it is clear that Auburn University has become an increasingly popular option for those looking to pursue higher education. However, the population of the university is not the only growth that Auburn has seen over the past 130 years. In order to support the demand of students flocking to Auburn, the campus itself needed to expand. Prior to The Plainsman’s founding, several of Auburn University’s most famous buildings were already built. Auburn University Chapel, built in 1850, Samford Hall, built in 1888 and Langdon Hall, built in 1846 and moved to campus in 1883; are among the oldest buildings on the campus. The past 130 years have brought a plethora of academic buildings, residence halls and dining facilities. One of the main projects that the University has taken on was the construction of Jordan-Hare Stadium. According to Van Plexico’s book, The History of Jordan-Hare Stadium, football games

between 1892-1922 were hosted on a field between modern-day Foy Hall and Samford Hall. This location is now a circular parking lot for faculty and administration, with its center containing benches, flowering shrubs, and pedestrian sidewalks. It is known as Central Garden. This field was abandoned for Drake Field, another on-campus location with limited seating. However, in November 1939, the new football stadium, called Auburn Stadium at the time, was completed in the current location of Jordan-Hare Stadium. In stark contrast to today’s capacity, Auburn Stadium was a mere 7,290-seat facility, according to Plexico. By 1955, with the success of Coach Ralph “Shug” Jordan, Auburn Stadium was able to expand to a capacity of 34,500. From this point onward, the stadium expanded into what students know today as Jordan-Hare Stadium. Now the 11th-largest on-campus stadium, Auburn University Athletics reports that Jordan-Hare Stadium has a capacity of 88,043 for current students, alumni and Auburn fanatics to fill. Although football is a large part of Auburn’s culture, obtaining an education in a productive environment is also seen as essential to many. In response, Auburn University has expanded both the quantity and size of educational facilities over the past 130 years. Known to many as the most hard-to-navigate building on campus, the Haley Center is

one of the most frequently visited academic facilities. In 1969, the Haley Center was built, consisting of 10 floors and 142 classrooms plus faculty offices, according to the Auburn University Library archives. Due to the building’s capacity, most students end up taking a class in the Haley Center at some point, making this facility an integral part of the Auburn experience. The Ralph Draughon Library is another hotspot for Auburn University students. Auburn University Facilities Management reports that the library was initially completed in 1963, but the size was doubled in 1990 as the university continued to expand. Additionally, the Mell Classroom Building was built in 2017 as an even greater extension of the library. With 26 classrooms and 40 study spaces, Auburn University provided more learning space for the quickly increasing student population. The expansion of campus is ongoing. With the completion of the Academic Classroom and Laboratory Complex in 2022 and the construction of the College of Education building beginning in 2023, the growth of Auburn University seems never-ending. Since the creation of the campus newspaper in 1893, Auburn University has built a community. Through the institutional name changes, the construction of new buildings and the growth in enrollment, The Plainsman has been here to report on it all.


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Auburn Raptor Center’s work behind the War Eagle pregame flight

FILE PHOTO

AURC shows off one of their eagles.

By RACHEL SWAN

to want to protect them and prevent the reasons we’re getting in a lot of the birds to our rehabilitation cenMany Auburn fans have come ter,” Sweeney said. to know and love the legendary The center has 24 raptors that are “War Eagle” battle cry. Legend has unable to be released, so they serve as it, “War Eagle” has been a tradition education ambassadors. Two of the at Auburn University since 1892, raptors — Independence and Auand thanks to the Auburn Universirea War Eagle VIII — are the eagles ty Raptor Center, Auburn fans can that currently fly at games. The censtill revel in the War Eagle tradition ter travels and hosts shows, and with to this day. the help of the education ambassaTo delve deeper into the War Eadors, they are able to promote awaregle legend, check out the Plainsman’s ness and education about raptors. March 27, 1959, publication. This In a recent surprise appearance at marked the first publication about a Philadelphia Eagles game on Sept. the War Eagle legend inThe Plains14, Independence had the unique man’s history. opportunity to take flight before the Today, the Raptor Center is a regame at the Lincoln Financial Field. habilitation and education facili“It was a great opportunity for us to go up there and fly her there,” Sweeney said. “She rocked it.” To prepare for flights in the Jordan-Hare Stadium on game day, the eagles practice five days. It takes a significant amount of work to train the eagles, but thanks to all the hard workers at the AURC and the eagles themselves, Auburn fans are able to witness the spectacular sight of the pregame flight. Sweeney explained the training process saying “it’s really about repetition, positive reinforcement and CHRISTINE PHAM | PHOTOGRAPHER trust. The eagles know the routine, they know they can trust us and that Auburn University Raptor Center show on Sept. 29, 2023. Campus Writer

ty that is responsible for caring for the War Eagles and other raptors and educating others about raptors. Amanda Sweeney, raptor specialist AURC, is in charge of the volunteer program and the training of the education birds. The AURC receives about 300 injured raptors every year and the rehabilitation facility is in charge of those raptors. “The goal is to rehabilitate those birds, get them healthy and release them back into the wild,” Sweeney said. Education is also a major focus of the center, which is what Sweeney primarily works on. “We are trying to inspire people to care more about these raptors and

we are going to provide them with those food rewards.” Andrew Hopkins, Coordinator Raptor Admin, explained that the center uses a leather lure to train the eagles. “When the Eagles come down to the lure, they get a food reward,” Hopkins said. “We make a unique design on the lures for each and every game, and we auction it off after the game.” Interestingly, the War Eagle did not start flying in Jordan-Hare Stadium until Aug. 31 2000. “It’s a relatively new tradition of us flying the eagles in the stadium,” Hopkins said. “There was actually a fraternity that took care of the eagles — Alpha Phi Omega — until the year 2000.” AURC does its best to make sure all the raptors, including the eagles, are taken care of at all times. “You don’t want anything negative to occur because these birds do remember, and we want them to willingly come to us, willingly go to shows, willingly train and, really, they have that option. They all have the choice, and they choose to participate in all this training because they know that they can trust us, we are not gonna hurt them and they are gonna get that food reward,” Sweeney said.

Everyone is welcome to come to AURC to visit and learn more about its programs. “It is important to us that people know that they can come out to see us, come to one of our shows, learn a lot more, see these birds in person and help us reach our goals,” Sweeney said. For those interested in witnessing the eagles up close and gaining insight about what AURC does, attending the Football Fans and Feathers presentations is an excellent opportunity. “The shows are open to the public ,and we have them right here in our amphitheater at 4 p.m. on the Friday’s before home football games,” Hopkins said. Another way to get involved is to volunteer. Sweeney’s journey with AURC first began as a volunteer when she came to Auburn and she fell in love. Today, she is in charge of the volunteer program. “We have a really unique program here where our student volunteers get to learn how to work with these birds and learn how to train them,” Sweeney said. So, Auburn fans, the next time you witness the majestic War Eagle take flight before a game, remember the tireless efforts of to AURC that make this tradition possible.

CHRISTINE PHAM | PHOTOGRAPHER

Auburn University Raptor Center show on Sept. 29, 2023.


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COLUMN | A semiotic history of Auburn University’s names By SAMI GRACE DONNELLY Opinion Editor

Words carry meaning. We all know this; but we don’t often consider it, especially when words become unquestiable definitions instead of a means for considering truths. Even though Auburn was founded in 1856, the name Auburn University was not even used until about 60 years ago. The university has actually claimed four different names throughout its history, and each of these conveys core, organizational values of the respective era. EAST ALABAMA MALE COLLEGE This was the name associated with the university at its founding in 1856. At the time, only men attended, and it was a very simple organization. The city of Auburn had been founded 20 years prior, and the name reflected a locational education operation. It’s always fair to question the motives of an institution in Civil War-era Alabama. In 1856, the organization we know and love today as Auburn University was heavily impacted by societal norms: namely racism, sexism and degenerate ideals of excellence. We shouldn’t blot this part of our history out, but we should tread lightly when reminiscing and displaying pride in it. Even if we assume its values were fearless, true and completely pure, it only benefitted a certain demographic. Women were not permitted to attend the university until 1890, and the first Black student did not set foot on campus until 1964 — over 100 years after the university’s establishment. There were certainly good aspects of EAMC, but it’s probably good that the university has reached new depths and branded itself around better ideas. AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL COLLEGE OF ALABAMA After being in business for 16 years, the university changed its name. In 1872 under the Morrill Act, it became classified as a land grant university — the first land grand university in the South. A land grant university is one that focuses heavily on the relationship between the state and its residents. The university designates resources for state residents. As the state residents partake in the resources, a symbiotic relationship is formed because they are more equipped and obligated to serve their state. With this progression, the university became associated with the state of Alabama. The new name reflected its unique purpose, location and specialties. Historical context places it around the Reconstructionist era. It makes sense why the two most important — and two only — majors were agriculture and mechanics. Those were pretty much the only things the state cared about, especially in a time of rebuilding itself from the Civil War’s effects. The student body was still pretty exclusionary, but the ed-

MATTHEW POCZATEK | PHOTOGRAPHER

The Auburn University sign sits in front of the University’s historic Samford Hall.

ucational values were starting to open up and reflect a desire for the greater good. Including “agricultural and mechanical” in the title reflects and conveys the importance of these two topics, especially to a university benefitting the state of Alabama. This name might reflect the earliest values of altruism. Instead of being the East Alabama Male College, a name that only identifies the self, the university defined itself as an organization with capability and desire for service. ALABAMA POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE Then 1899, the name changed once again. By now, women were allowed to attend, and there were more majors. Including the word “polytechnic” brought a new sense of professionalism and grandeur to the scene. While not as service-oriented as the previous name, this one conveys a message of variety and larger scope. The university was taking on greater roles and having greater influence. It was in this era that the creed was written. Anyone affiliated with the university knows of the creed or has, at the very least, experienced the conditions of it. The values Auburn University uses to define itself, hold itself accountable and inspire itself were all written in the API era. These values are intrinsic to the university, and it is one of the greatest acts of identification. Hard work, education,

honesty and truthfulness, a sound mind, obedience, human sympathy and freedom — these abundant values are what the university sought after and conveyed through the name API. AUBURN UNIVERSITY In 1960, the journey was completed. We became Auburn. It may seem much simpler than each of its predecessors, but it conveys so much in its one-word signifier. Auburn is the town. It’s the charming, historical coming-together of people of all ages and backgrounds to rally around something wholesome, unifying and true. Auburn is also the university, The Creed, the excellent academics, spirited sports efforts, timeless tradition and diverse group of people — the Auburn Family — who hold it dear. “Auburn” holds so much meaning, especially to those who have experienced what it means to live here. The simplicity is profound, modest and self-sufficient. It needs no explanation, yet it invites anyone to come experience its loveliness. The Loveliest Village on the Plains produced one of the greatest and most beloved academic institutions in the country (and with only three overhauls of rebranding): Auburn University.


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Plainsman cartoonist recounts his time at Auburn By BRYCHELLE BROOKS Campus Writer

Jack Mallette, Auburn alumni recounts his time at Auburn. Mallette was the art editor of the Glomerata and was and a part of the “school of cartooning,” on the Plainsman. Mallette was a part of the Glomerata, Plainsman and The Circle during 197679. He worked on The Plainsman staff as a cartoonist and art editor. “If you worked on one, you basically worked on all three back then, it was sort of incestuous for organizations, but fun nonetheless,” Mallette said. He spoke on his cartoon character, Ace Roxoff, a parody of an Auburn student, which didn’t go over well with Plainsman editorial staff when published. “The genesis of it was someone flooded the fountain in the Haley center, and someone was doing their laundry in it. And in the next frame, you see Ace Roxoff asleep under a lawn chair, with a sign that says, ‘Wash 50 cents, please wake attendant,” Mallette said. “It ran about five or six issues, until it got complaints of the name ‘Roxoff.’ He’s Russian, but

they didn’t see it that way.” During his years in student media, he designed many covers for the Glomerata and the Circle. He also was a photographer on the Glomerata staff; however he mainly did a few characters for the Plainsman and the Glomerata. Plainsman staff would still find ways to have fun and make memories with their friends. Malette recalls his favorite memory with the Plainsman staff from the late 70s, after not being invited into an honorary club at the University. “It was Thanksgiving weekend. Someone mentioned something about the honorary at Auburn, the Spades. They were a “cool kid group,” that none of us were ever going to be able to join,” Mallette said. “So I took a spoon, and some of those stick-on letters – it was the 70’s you know – and I went around the Plainsman suite and knighted everyone with it.” Mallette remembered his time in student media with fondness. He also mentioned knowing that he would like to work in the media. So, for a few years when he was out of college, he worked as an art director for Willard & Co. Once Willard & Co. shut down in

Mississippi, Mallette found his way back to his roots of writing. He wrote for a magazine called Portico Jackson about historical subjects and made them compelling to readers. Once both companies shut down in the Ja c k s o n Mi s s i s s i p p i a re a , he returned to his love for media that he discovered on The Plainsman. He had an ad in 1977 in The Plainsman stating that he collected old comic books and bottle caps. Now, he works for himself, collecting vintage art, comics and autographed memorabilia. “I decided I wanted to work for someone just as smart and as stupid as me – and that narrowed the field down to one,” Mallette said. “Now I’ve owned and operated Mallette’s vintage collectables. I have over 200,000 rare comic books, over 2,000,000 baseball cards and over 100,000 rare books, movie posters and autographs.” He explained that his love for working with The Plainsman on his art helped him create his business. The things he collects are also art based, such as the comic books. When asked what his favorite collectable item he’s gotten was, he mentioned a comic book with his name and the name of the person he purCONTRIBUTED BY JACK MALLETTE chased it from. “It’s called the Mallette-Brown

CONTRIBUTED BY JACK MALLETTE

copy of Action Funnies number one. It’s the prototype edition of Action Comics number one, which was the first appearance of Superman in June 1938,” Mallette said. He thanks The Plainsman for getting him where he is today. He’s proud of what past and present Plainsman staff members have accomplished over the years, and encouraged them to keep up their work, and to stay persistent. “It was heartening to see that people had noticed. You work on something like the Plainsman, and you do your work, you meet your deadlines, and you jump through hoops and hurdles with your friends,” Mallette said. “You do this week in and week out, you don’t really see or hear about the impact you have on your fellow students. Only now and then does someone come up to me or you and say they like the work that you do on the Plainsman.”


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Auburn architecture and campus adapts to Auburn’s By CONNOR COPELAND Campus Writer

Since Auburn’s establishment in 1856, the campus has drastically changed. Formerly a landscape covered by miles of farmland, Auburn now houses an ever-growing student population. Auburn’s early campus sat at the corner of College Street and Magnolia Avenue, made up of Samford and Langdon Halls, among other buildings Justin Miller, professor of architecture and head of the school, described how big-name architects from New York impacted Auburn’s early campus. “[The] landscape was designed by the

Olmsted brothers, who have a long tradition of campus planning across the United States,” Miller said. “Frederick Law Olmsted designed Central Park and was one of the first to be recognized professional landscape architects in the United States and his sons carried out his practice and did planning for lots of campuses and cities around the country.” Following the Olmsted brothers’ initial plans, the campus developed south and west of its original location on College and Magnolia, gradually becoming the campus students know and love today. Gorham Bird, assistant professor of architecture and member of the Design Review Committee, believes the basis of de-

signing a campus often focuses on the materials used. Auburn knows this well, he said, as the prominent “brick and stone are going to hold up for generations.” Much like the building it sits in front of, Samford Lawn has become a staple of the University. On gamedays, families crowd the greenspaces with chairs and tents, eagerly awaiting the excitement in Jordan-Hare Stadium. Miller noted consistencies between buildings on campus, which largely rest on the red brick and limestone found in the exteriors. “Auburn’s campus vocabulary has largely been fairly traditional, in that sense,

leaned on basically a kind of Georgian vocabulary for the most part,” Miller said. “There have been moments where it has become a little more forward leaning in terms of the types of work or types of buildings you see around the country.” Even as the buildings maintain a cohesive feel, many architectural styles are represented throughout campus, according to Bird. “There’s a lot of buildings on campus that are considered kind of neo-classical or neo-gothic style,” Miller said. “You look at Samford Hall with the kind of steep pitched roofs [and] a lot of the ornate details all are kind of picking up on that style.”

CONTRIBUTED BY AUBURN UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

An 1893 campus map of the Alabama Polytechnic Institute.


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growing population Miller also noted the buildings representative of modernist architecture, which he called “a significant architectural movement in the ‘40s, ‘50s and ‘60s.” Foy and Biggin Halls have the sharp lines and asymmetry typical of modernism. To Miller, new academic buildings are “almost like a billboard in a lot of ways to kind of signify to the public what’s going on inside.” The many windows of newer buildings such as the ACLC and Horton-Hardgrave Hall allow both a figurative and literal transparency inside. In the fall semester of 2023, Auburn welcomed the largest freshman class in the university’s history, another marker in the trend toward larger enrollment. The previous spring, Auburn completed demolition of the Hill Residence Hall complex,

which could house over a thousand students. Two new educational complexes will replace it. Miller noted that future campus planning will acknowledge the university’s past while also charting a path into the future. “The campus standards try to find a good, happy balance between kind of fitting in with the historic fabric of campus, but we also build buildings differently than we did 200 years ago,” Miller said. Auburn’s planner and architects have a difficult task ahead of them. Millver recognizes the “desire for buildings on campus to look and feel like they’re a part of Auburn” while also becoming technologically advanced. “And so it’s hard to describe, you know what the future looks like,” Miller said. “But I would say it’s kind of an attempt to fit in, but still be modCONTRIBUTED BY AUBURN UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES ern and new and kind of forward lookA rendering of the Auburn Univeristy campus attributed to Inman Cook. ing.”

CONTRIBUTED BY AUBURN UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

A map of the Auburn University campus in the 1989-90 school year.


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Plainsman sports alumni reflect on benefit of organization By GRACE HEIM Sports Reporter

On the wall of the Plainsman newsroom is a whiteboard marked with advice for young journalists. Near the bottom is a line that reads, “Take advantage. The Plainsman is big and you can get jobs and work from it.” Many writers who cover Auburn athletics today got their start at The Plainsman. Nathan King and Caleb Jones are two such professionals in the business. King is a reporter for AuburnUndercover and 247Sports who serves as a beat writer for the site. He wrote for The Plainsman from 2016-20 and held the sports editor position from 2018-20. Caleb Jones is currently a writer for AuburnSports.com, a part of Rivals, and was on The Plainsman’s sports staff from 201922, serving as sports editor from 2021-22. King and Jones reflected on their time at The Plainsman and how it has affected

their careers in sports journalism. King knew he wanted to be involved with the student newspaper at Auburn since he was a senior in high school. He remembers walking into the Plainsman newsroom during his first week of class and being hooked by the sports section. “It hooked me immediately,” King said. “I made a lot of great friends there. I just liked it so much. I liked going to games and reporting and doing all that.” Jones started school in Auburn as a chemical engineering major, but figured out he was not so good at math. About two months into his freshman year, he began exploring a major change when he remembered how much he liked sports. He talked to a friend who worked for The Plainsman about writing for the sports section, and before he knew it, Jones was writing sports articles for The Plainsman. “I gained so much experience from writing for the student newspaper,” Jones said. “Writing for the Plainsman gave me that

experience, and I learned a lot that could translate into the real workplace.” For both King and Jones, The Plainsman was the door to many other opportunities in sports writing. It led King to an internship his senior year and Jones to many freelance writing opportunities throughout his college years, eventually leading them both to where they are now. “There was not anything else that helped me get a job more than The Plainsman,” King said. “I would say it was everything.” Jones agreed that the experience he gained was immensely beneficial for his professional career. “I figured the best way for me to build my resume and get that experience was to actually do it. So I wrote for the Plainsman just as much as I could,” Jones said. When asked about their favorite memories while with The Plainsman, both King and Jones were quick to reminisce on the big sporting moments they each got to

cover while attending Auburn. King fondly remembered the 2019 men’s basketball team and its run to the program’s first Final Four. “That was a special feeling. To feel like you are a part of covering a team and being a part of that beat,” King said. Jones had the chance to go to travel to Penn State for the “White Out” game in 2021. “You always hear about the White Out,” Jones said. “From covering the game to seeing fans that had traveled there and doing post-game coverage. The whole trip for me was just really memorable.” King and Jones’s stories are just a couple from the ever-growing network of Plainsman alumni who have found success in the real world. The work and investment from people like King and Jones show what The Plainsman can be: a network that allows student writers to gain experience and connections to be successful in the journalism world.


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FILE PHOTO

Ricardo Louis running in the winning touchdown.

Auburn fans recount memories of two improbable moments of 2013 season By JACK EARNHARDT Sports Writer

The 2013 Auburn Tigers football team is a memory in the hearts of fans that will last forever. While 2013 the season was filled with magic from start to finish, two moments will always stand out from this season: the “Miracle in Jordan-Hare” and the “Kick Six.” On Nov. 16, 2013, the 10-1 Auburn Tigers faced off against the Georgia Bulldogs in The Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry. The Tigers started the game off hot, taking a 27-7 lead, however, Georgia quarterback Aaron Murray led a comeback that finished with the Bulldogs leading 38-37 in the game’s final minute. On fourth-and-18 with 36 seconds remaining in the game, Auburn quarterback Nick Marshall threw a Hail Mary pass which was tipped up off the fingers of two Georgia defenders, and then fell right into the hands of Auburn wide receiver Ricardo Louis for the game-winning touchdown. “We walked away from our seats and went to the concrete ramp, so we were in the end zone where it happened,” said lifelong Auburn fan Laura Builk Glenn. “We saw the ball get tipped off, and we saw it fall perfectly into his hands.” Elizabeth Orantes saw the play from the student section.

“There was a weird sense of calmness before it, and then it happened all so fast,” Orantes said. “We thought we had lost and then suddenly people were jumping around and going crazy.” One of the reasons the 2013 season was so special for Auburn fans is not just because of two miracles, it’s because the two miracles took place in back-to-back games. Exactly two weeks after the Georgia game, Auburn faced off against No. 1 Alabama in the Iron Bowl. With one second on the clock, the game was tied at 28 with the SEC West championship on the line, and Alabama attempted a 57-yard field goal. This attempt came up just short and it was returned by Auburn cornerback Chris Davis 109 yards for the walkoff, game-winning touchdown. “I couldn’t watch, I just decided I would hear it,” said Auburn graduate Melissa Woody. “Everyone around me just went crazy, and then I looked up and saw Chris Davis running straight toward me.” Jon Harrison was a bartender in Auburn at the time of the event, and they decided to close the bar because it was so intense. “I had closed all my tabs as the Kick Six approached, and then it happened. The entire bar just erupted and I was getting picked up and hugged from behind,” Harrison said. “I stood on the table, and we all did ‘Bod-

da Getta’ and then my boss let us leave early so we grabbed toilet paper and all headed to Toomer’s.” While some recall the game for the wild ending and the ensuing chaos from the fans, others used the opportunity to create fond memories of loved ones. Auburn graduate Mike Means used the moment to spread his father-in-law’s ashes on Pat Dye Field. “He died suddenly the Monday night before the Iron Bowl. We cremated his ashes on Friday, and I took some and put them in a baggie with me before the game on Saturday,” Means said. “Then the Kick Six happened, and they mobbed the field but I didn’t want to get in that crowd. I then reached into my pockets to see if I had my keys, and I felt the bag of ashes. I then went to the middle of the field, poured the ashes on the ground, and said a prayer for my father-in-law. A week later, I read an article in AL.com because they found ashes on the field.“ Tammy Lyndall Stallcup remembered the “Kick Six” as her last game with her father. “We were sitting behind the goalpost and saw Davis there, and my pops said, ‘I wonder why the coach put him there,’ and then we saw the magic,” Stallcup said. “It ended up being the last game he was able to go to.” Even 10 years later, the memories of the two miracle plays remain in the hearts and minds of Auburn fans everywhere.


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Plainsman’s Choice: Best game of all time

FILE PHOTO

Auburn fans storm the field to celebrate the win over Alabama on Nov. 30, 2013.

By TP HAMMOCK Sports Writer

The best Auburn game of all time, voted on by readers of The Plainsman, is the 2013 Iron Bowl. Arguably one of the greatest games in all of college football history, it had an all-time game-ending play. Auburn was coming off a 3-9 season while Alabama was coming off back-to-back national championships. These two programs were on the opposite sides of the world just one season prior, but this matchup marked the highest-ranked Iron Bowl of all time. The leader of the Auburn offense was Nick Marshall, a transfer who was originally a cornerback at the University of Georgia. Alongside Marshall was a new head coach on the Plains, Gus Malzahn. Malzahn had brought in a new high-pace offense that was unique to the college football world. That season, Auburn came into the game with just one loss — a 35-21 road loss to LSU on Sept. 21. Alabama, after an early-season scare against Texas A&M, was beating opponents by an average of 43 points — led by quarterback A.J. McCarron. The game kicked off, and Auburn took an early lead with a long touchdown run by Marshall. However, it was not long before Alabama gained control of the game as the Crimson Tide scored 21 points in the second quarter. Before halftime, Auburn got back on the board thanks to a Tre Mason touchdown to make it a seven-point deficit going into the break. The score could have been worse for Auburn, had Alabama’s kick-

er Cade Foster not missed a field goal on the opening drive. Auburn made its adjustments at halftime and came out of the half with a touchdown from a Marshall pass to C.J. Uzomah to tie the game. Foster missed another field goal, his second of the game, but the Crimson Tide defense picked up the slack from the special teams unit and was shutting down the Tiger offense. As the fourth quarter began,the game was tied at 21. Auburn pinned Alabama deep with a punt, and the Crimson Tide was on their 1-yard line to start the drive. On the first play of the drive, McCarron threw a deep ball to an open Amari Cooper who took it all the way for a 99-yard touchdown — seemingly taking the momentum of the game. Auburn’s offense continued to stall as its defense fought to keep the Tigers’ dreams of an SEC Championship berth alive. But Alabama found itself in field goal range with a chance to make it a two-possession game with just over two minutes to play. Foster, who had already missed two field goals, once again missed a critical field goal attempt, giving the Tigers a chance. Auburn marched down the field, led by six carries from Mason to set up another play that would be talked about for years. Marshall scrambled out to the left and threw the ball with his left foot behind the line of scrimmage to avoid a penalty. He found a wide-open Sammie Coates who took it in for a 39-yard touchdown to tie the game. Alabama began to run its offense and got to midfield

before running back T.J. Yeldon ran out of bounds. The clock showed zero, seemingly pointing to the first Iron Bowl to go to overtime. Alabama head coach Nick Saban thought otherwise and challenged the play to see if there was any time left on the clock. He was right, exactly one second left on the clock. Alabama decided to bring the kicking unit back out there but not Foster. Instead, it was redshirt freshman Adam Griffith. Griffith had only taken two field goals so far in the season. He was out there now for the most high-pressured kick of the game, a 57-yard field goal. Standing in front of the goal post was Chris Davis, who had one punt return for a touchdown in the 2013 season, and now was awaiting, hoping the kick would come up short so he could have the chance to make something happen. The snap, the hold, the kick, it had the accuracy, but it just ran out of power. Davis got the ball and started running. He cut to the left, and a hole opened up. No one caught him from the Alabama kicking unit, and Davis ran it all the back for the Auburn touchdown to win the 2013 Iron Bowl. From there, the “Kick Six” was born. “They’re not gonna keep em’ off the field tonight,” screamed the late Auburn radio announcer Rod Bramblett. Bramblett’s call continues to be played on today and the Kick Six is a staple highlight among college football videos. The 2013 Iron Bowl remains one of the most talked-about games in college football history.


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Plainsman’s Choice: Best athlete of all time By CAITLYN GRIFFIN Sports Writer

Bo Jackson, perceived as one of the greatest athletes in sports history, has been voted as the greatest Auburn athlete of all time according to The Auburn Plainsman’s readers. After being recruited by Pat Dye, the Bessemer, Alabama, native attended Auburn University to play football and baseball from 1982-85 — even though the New York Yankees drafted him out of high school. Alongside Auburn quarterback Randy Campbell, Jackson played running back and finished his career with 4,575 all-purpose yards, 45 touchdowns — 43 rushing and two receiving — and averaged 6.6 yards per carry. During his years on the Plains, Jackson was a two-time All-American (1983 and 1985), a three-time All-SEC team member (1982, 1983, 1985) and a Heisman Tro-

phy winner (1985). His No. 34 jersey has been retired, making him one of four Auburn football players to have their number retired. In the 1986 NFL Draft, Jackson was drafted first overall by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers but vowed not to play for them because of a physical he took with the Buccaneers, which they claimed had been approved by the SEC and NCAA, cut Jackson’s senior season in baseball short. Instead, Jackson was selected in the seventh round of the 1987 NFL Draft by the Los Angeles Raiders where he started his NFL career. During his four-year NFL career, Jackson recorded 18 touchdowns, 2782 yards and averaged 73.2 yards per game. Jackson was selected to the NFL Pro Bowl in 1990 and won the NEA NFL Rookie of the Year in 1987. He also led the league in longest rushing attempt in 1987, 1989 and 1990. The famous running back was inducted into the

College Football Hall of Fame in 1999. Not only was he drafted into the NFL, but Major League Baseball wanted the two-sport professional athlete. Jackson was drafted by the Kansas City Royals in 1986 in the fourth round (105th overall). In 1989, Jackson was named MVP of the MLB All-Star Game. He was named the Sporting News Comeback Player of the Year (1993) and won the Tony Conigliaro Award (1993) and the Beacon Award (2013). Jackson’s electric football career halted to a stop after suffering a hip injury in January 1991 during a Raiders playoff game, resulting in him not returning to the NFL. However, he still appeared on the baseball field. After being released by the Royals, Jackson played three partial seasons with the Chicago White Sox (1991, 1993) and the California Angels (1994) before he retired in 1995. Although his career was shortFILE PHOTO lived, Jackson made a lasting impact on the Bo Jackson runs the ball for Auburn in 1983. world of sports.


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History of women’s sports at Auburn University:

FILE PHOTO

Vickie Orr (50) was a three-time All-American in the late 1980’s at Auburn

By ALEXA GARDNER Sports Writer

In 1915, Nora Rothrock, Laura Watt, Annie Edwards, Eunice Stodghill, Barbara Wright, Mary Crenshaw, Francis Steele, Jane Smith, Margaret Duggar and Zelma Grimes became the first women in the history of Auburn University to compete in orange and blue. These women were the first members of the Auburn University “co-eds” basketball team which initiated a movement that would continue into the next century. No record was kept of this team, with the exception of a team photograph found in the 1915 Glomerata, the Auburn University yearbook. They competed in what would be considered today as intramural games. After the first mention in 1915, women’s athletics were not acknowledged or recognized in the Glomerata again until 1920, with a photograph of the basketball team that is believed to have played the first women’s intercollegiate game at Auburn. This

team accomplished a record of 4-2, outscoring its opponents 136-79. However, after this era, the progressive movements of women’s athletics lost momentum. For about the next 50 years, women’s athletics remained limited to club and intramural teams with little to no competition between universities. This persisted until the paramount signing of Title IX. “No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance,” (signed by President Richard Nixon on June 23, 1972). Susan Nunnelly, the voice of women’s basketball and an SEC trailblazer, came to Auburn University as a freshman in 1966. She graduated with her bachelor’s degree in education in 1970 and received her master’s degree in 1972, the same year Title IX was enacted. Nunnelly became the program’s second women’s basketball head coach in 1973

and coached for three seasons. In the year of Title IX, Auburn University was under the leadership of President Harry M. Philpott and athletic director Lee Hayley. “We were very fortunate because Coach Hayley was our athletic director, and he was very open to involving and bringing the women on board,” Nunnelly said. “So many schools had athletic directors that were not so open to it and felt like they were in some way going to intimidate and jeopardize their men’s program, which was not what Title IX ever intended to do.” In the early days of women’s athletics, post Title IX, financial problems prospered as the women’s programs were solely funded by the physical education department. Nunnelly would make trips with both women’s volleyball and basketball to officiate games because if a team brought an official, the entry fee was waived, and they took every opportunity to save money. “Sometimes the kids would drive their own cars... We would even play two games a

day because we couldn’t afford to stay the night,” Nunnelly said. 1976 was a crucial year in the development of Auburn women’s athletics. The role of funding for women’s athletics was handed to the athletic department, and over the next decade, the budget grew from just $100,000 to about $1 million. In the same year, professors who were acting as part-time coaches were replaced with full-time professional coaches. Facilities were enhanced, and Auburn was finally making headway in women’s athletics. However, there was still much work to be done. Women’s teams often shared facilities with the men’s teams during this time. It became routine for the women’s volleyball team to put tape on the court before hosting a competition and have to take it off immediately following the match so that the men’s


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paving the way for the future of female athletics basketball team could practice. Other arrangements included doubleheader basketball games in which the women’s played first with a running clock. They played true 20-minute halves so that the men’s team could start on time due to radio or television contracts. As time went on and the women’s team gained a following, this concept became history. Also in 1976, Hayley hired Joanna Davenport as the university’s first women’s athletic director. Davenport successfully improved scholarships and facilities for female athletes, with the first women’s athletic scholarship being awarded to volleyball player Sheila Smith. By 1977, Auburn provided eight women’s sports which included basketball, golf, gymnastics, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, track and field and volleyball. As women’s athletics continued to progress at Auburn University, Joe Ciampi, women’s basketball coach from 1979-2004, advanced women’s athletics with one of the most successful coaching careers in Auburn basketball history. Under Ciampi’s coaching, Auburn recorded three consecutive trips to the NCAA Final Four and four SEC Tournament Championships. This was just the beginning as coach David Marsh led the women’s swim team to three NCAA Championships

in the early 2000s, followed by Kim Evans with women’s golf who continuously competed in NCAA Championships, to today’s coaches who have made a lasting impact on women’s athletics. Karen Hoppa, head coach of the Auburn women’s soccer team, is celebrating her 25th year as head coach. Hoppa has been with the Tigers since 1999 and has accumulated an overall record of 272-181-51, collected seven SEC Western Division Championships and became the eighth female head coach to succeed 300 wins at a Division I level in the history of the sport. “I think [women’s athletics] has really grown a ton and I’ve been able to see that not just with our sport, but among all the sports,” Hoppa said. “Just watching the way our student athletes get treated now is really a huge difference in a positive way since I started.” Women’s athletics at Auburn University has changed vastly since the first women’s team in 1920 with the addition of athletic department participation, funding and Title IX, which has had an effect outside the realm of athletics. “So many people are confused with Title IX that it just meant something to women in athletics, but that is not true,” Nunnelly said. “It helped women in every aspect, certainly all the careers. But thank goodness for athletics because I think we played a role that helped people realize that women are worth taking the chance.”

FILE PHOTO

Susan Nunnelly throws the first pitch during the Oral Roberts vs Auburn baseball game on Saturday, March 12, 2016.

MAGGIE BOWMAN | PHOTOGRAPHER

Coach Karen Hoppa on Aug. 17, 2023 after the first game of the season vs. Samford at the Auburn Soccer Complex.


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1983 Auburn football: national champion? By PATRICK BINGHAM Sports Writer

With just seconds remaining in New Orleans, No. 3 Auburn found itself at the 9-yard line down 7-6 to the No. 8 Michigan Wolverines . The season-long dream of a championship was right before its eyes. It all came down to the Tigers’ kicker, Al Del Greco, for the program’s first national championship since 1957. Following the end of the regular season, Auburn compiled a 10-1 record and earned an outright SEC championship, granting the Tigers an invitation to the 50th Sugar Bowl and the No. 3 ranking in the country. Two undefeated squads stood ahead of Auburn: No. 1 Nebraska and No. 2 Texas. Texas was the Tigers’ lone blemish of the season with the Longhorns capturing a 20-7 victory inside Jordan-Hare Stadium in Auburn’s second game of the season. Both Nebraska and Texas, however, fell in their respective bowl games — logically clearing a path for Auburn to win the title. The topranked Cornhuskers were upset by the No. 5 Miami Hurricanes in the Orange Bowl 31-30,

and second-ranked Texas fell to No. 7 Georgia in the Cotton Bowl Classic 10-9. So as the time trickled down for Auburn, Del Greco kicked the ball right through the uprights, and the celebration began for the Tigers. Del Greco was lifted into the air, and he emphatically raised up a number one. But the next morning wasn’t as cheerful for the Tigers, as the AP Poll announced the Miami Hurricanes as the national champions of the 1983 college football season. The Hurricanes’ upset win over top-ranked Nebraska in the Orange Bowl propelled them from the No. 5 ranking to the top spot over Auburn. The 60 sports reporters and broadcasters who voted in the final AP Poll of the season gave Miami 47 ½ first-place votes to seven for Auburn and 4 ½ for Nebraska. The Hurricanes completed their 1983 campaign with an 11-1 record, with a lone loss in the first week of the season to the Florida Gators 28-3. The Gators were one of Auburn’s wins during the season, as the Tigers defeated fifth-ranked Florida 28-21 at Jordan-Hare Stadium on Oct. 29. The Tigers’ win against Florida was the first

of five straight games against ranked opponents to close out the season for Auburn. Auburn defeated No. 7 Maryland 35-23 the following week and snapped fourth-ranked Georgia’s streak of 23 straight SEC victories in Athens, Georgia, 13-7. The Tigers then ended the season by beating Alabama, ranked No. 19, in the Iron Bowl in Birmingham, Alabama, and eighth-ranked Michigan 9-7 in the Sugar Bowl. Miami, an Independent program at the time, only played four ranked opponents during the course of its season. The HurFILE PHOTO ricanes lost to the 16th-ranked Running back Lionel James (6) runs the ball for Auburn. Florida Gators to start the season, defeated No. 13 Notre Dame on the road, lected Auburn as the 1983 national champiwon at home against 12th-ranked West Vir- on. The university, however, has yet to recogginia and won the Orange Bowl over the top- nize the title. ranked Cornhuskers. The 1983 Auburn football team was recWhile most national polls followed suit and ognized for the 40th anniversary of its Sugar handed Miami the crown for the first time in Bowl and SEC Championship season prior to its program’s history, the New York Times se- the 2023 Georgia game.


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PLAINSMAN PUZZLES

11. CIVIL WAR 12. WOMEN 13. BODDA GETTA 14. OPELIKA 15. SPIRIT 16. PETRIE 17. HEY 18. ANVRE 19. YIELD 20. LATHE

SOLUTION

Down 1. Auburn won the first football game it ever played. Who did the Tigers beat? 3. Auburn is the loveliest village on the ______. 5. Which Auburn team has six national championship titles? 6. Auburn football plays in __________ stadium. 9. What was Auburn University’s name in 1899? 10. Where do Auburn students go to roll trees after a big win? 12. Who did Auburn start admitting as students in 1982? 14. What city is Auburn’s “hip older sister?” 15. Finish this line of the creed: I believe in a sound mind, in a sound body and a ______ that is not afraid, and in clean sports that develop these qualities.

CROSSWORD

1. GEORGIA 2. NEWTON 3. PLAINS 4. WAR EAGLE 5. EQUESTRIAN 6. JORDAN HARE 7. KICK SIX 8. LEE 9. API 10. TOOMERS

SUDOKU

Across 2. Who is Auburn’s most recent Heisman winner? 4. What is Auburn’s battle cry? 7. This 2013 football game is nicknamed _______ after Chris Davis returned a missed field goal 109 yards to beat Alabama. 8. What county is Auburn in? 11. Why did Auburn shut its doors from 1861 to 1866? 13. What Auburn chant ends with “Weagle weagle war damn eagle, kick ‘em in the butt big blue, hey” 16. Auburn played its first football game in 1892. What was the last name of the coach at the time? 17. On Jan. 29, 1985, Auburn reinstated an annual tradition of the 1950s and 1960s called “___ Day,” 18. What was the name of Auburn’s first eagle? 19. Finish the fight song: “War Eagle, fly down the field, Ever to conquer, never to _____” ? 20. What is the metal object next to Samford Hall that can tell if a woman is a true Auburn woman?

SOLUTION


T h i s

i s

h i s t o r y .

S O U T H

8 T H

S T R E E T

|

D O W N T O W N

Meet the coolest college town in the South. And his hip older sister. aotourism.com

O P E L I K A


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