Auburn University
(AU or Auburn) is a public university located in Auburn
, Alabama
, U.S.
With more than 24,100 students and 1,200
faculty members, it is one of the largest
universities in the state. Auburn was chartered
on February 1, 1856, as the
East Alabama Male
College, a private
liberal
arts school affiliated with the
Methodist Episcopal Church,
South. In the year 1872 the
college
became the state's first
public
land-grant university under
the
Morrill Act and was renamed the
Agricultural and Mechanical College of Alabama. In
1892, the college became the first four-year
coeducational school in the state. The
curriculum at the university originally focused on arts and
agriculture. This trend changed under the guidance of Dr. William
Leroy Broun, who taught classics and sciences and believed both
disciplines were important in the overall growth of the university
and the individual. The college was renamed the
Alabama
Polytechnic Institute (API) in 1899, largely because of
Dr. Broun’s influence. The college continued expanding, and in 1960
its name was officially changed to Auburn University to acknowledge
the varied academic programs and larger curriculum of a major
university. It had been popularly known as "Auburn" for many years.
Auburn is among the few American universities designated as a
land-grant,
sea-grant, and
space-grant research center.
History
Auburn University was chartered by the Alabama Legislature as the
East Alabama Male College on May 6, 1856, coming under the guidance
of the
Methodist Church in 1859.
The first president of the institution was Reverend
William J. Sasnett, and the school opened its doors
in 1859 to a student body of eighty and a faculty of ten. The early
history of Auburn is inextricably linked with the
Civil War and the
Reconstruction-era
South. Classes were held in "Old Main" until the college was closed
due to the Civil War, when most of the students and faculty left to
enlist. The campus was used as a training ground for the
Confederate Army, and "Old
Main" served as a hospital for Confederate wounded.
To
commemorate Auburn's contribution to the Civil War, a cannon lathe
used for the manufacture of cannons for the Confederate Army and
recovered from Selma,
Alabama
, was presented to Auburn in 1952 by brothers of
Delta Chapter of the Alpha Phi Omega
fraternity. It sits today on the lawn next to Samford Hall
.
Post-Civil War
The school was reopened in 1866 following the end of the Civil War
and has been open ever since.
In 1872, control of the institution was
transferred from the Methodist Church to the State of Alabama
for
financial reasons. Alabama placed the school under the
provisions of the
Morrill Act as a
land-grant institution, the
first in the South to be established separate from the state
university. This act provided for 240,000 acres (971 km²) of
Federal land to be sold in order to provide funds for an
agricultural and mechanical school. As a result, in 1872 the school
was renamed to the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Alabama.
Under the provisions of this act, land-grant institutions were also
supposed to teach military tactics and train officers for the
United States military. In the late 1800s, most students at the
Agricultural and Mechanical College of Alabama were enrolled in the
cadet program, learning military tactics and training to become
future officers. Each county in the state was allowed to nominate
two cadets to attend the college free of charge.
In 1892, two historic events occurred: women were first admitted to
the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Alabama, and football
was first played as a school sport. Eventually, football replaced
polo as the main sport on campus. In 1899, the school name was
again changed, this time to Alabama Polytechnic Institute.
On October 1, 1918, nearly all of Alabama Polytechnic Institute's
able-bodied male students 18 or older voluntarily joined the
United States Army for
short-lived military careers on campus. The student-soldiers
numbered 878, according to API President Charles Thach, and formed
the academic section of the Student Army Training Corps. The
vocational section was composed of enlisted men sent to Auburn for
training in radio and mechanics. The students received honorable
discharges two months later following the Armistice that ended
World War I. API struggled through the
great depression, having scrapped an extensive expansion program by
then-President
Bradford Knapp.
Faculty salaries were cut drastically, and enrollment decreased
along with state appropriations to the college.
During
World War II, API again found
its place training officers for the U.S. Military on campus; Auburn
produced over 32,000 troops for the war effort. Following the end
of World War II, API, like many colleges around the country,
experienced a period of massive growth caused by returning soldiers
taking advantage of their
GI Bill offer of
free education. In the five-year period following the end of the
war, enrollment at API more than doubled.
Name change: Auburn

Recognizing the school had moved
beyond its agricultural and mechanical roots, it was granted
university status by the Alabama Legislature in 1960 and officially
renamed Auburn University, a name that better expressed the varied
academic programs and expanded curriculum that the school had been
offering for years. However, it had been popularly called "Auburn"
for many years even before the official name change.
Like most universities in the
American South, Auburn was
racially segregated prior to 1963, with
only white students being admitted. Integration went smoothly at
Auburn, with the first African-American student being admitted in
1964, and the first doctoral degree being granted to an
African-American in 1967.
Today,
Auburn has grown since its founding to have an on-campus enrollment
of over 23,000 students and a faculty of almost 1,200 at the main
campus in Auburn
. In
the state, Auburn University's enrollment is behind the University
of Alabama in on-campus student enrollment as of 2009.
There are also over
6,000 students at the Auburn University Montgomery
satellite campus established in 1967.
Academics
Auburn has traditionally been rated highly by academic ranking
services, and has been listed as one of the top 50 public
universities for 15 consecutive years. The 2009 edition of U.S.
News and World Reports ranks Auburn as the 88th university in the
nation among public and private schools and 39th among public
universities. Auburn was the only college or university in Alabama
included in the inaugural edition (1981) of the widely respected
Peterson's Guides to America's 296 Most Competitive
Colleges.
Auburn is
a charter member of the Southeastern Conference (SEC), which
is currently composed of 11 of the largest Southern public
universities in the US and one private university, Vanderbilt
. Among the other 10 peer public
universities, two are ranked ahead of Auburn by
U.S.
News & World Report. This high ranking and reputation
for academic quality is in spite of the fact that Auburn's $378.6
million endowment is currently the second smallest of the 12 SEC
universities. An attempt to increase the endowment by $500 million
began in 2005 with the "It Begins at Auburn" campaign. As of August
2006, the campaign had raised $523 million, making it the largest
campaign in university history.
The university currently consists of thirteen schools and colleges.
Programs in architecture, pharmacy, veterinary science,
engineering, and business have been ranked among the best in the
country.
The architecture journal
DesignIntelligence in its 2009 edition of
"America's Best Architecture and Design Schools"
ranked Auburn's undergraduate Architecture program 12th nationally,
and the deans of Architecture schools ranked Auburn the second most
admired program. In addition, Auburn's graduate Landscape
Architecture program was ranked No. 14 nationally by
"DesignIntelligence."
Auburn University's College of Architecture pioneered the joining
of architecture and interior design curriculum with the nation's
first interior architecture degree program. The Dual Degree
Architecture & Interior Architecture degree was the first in
the nation as well. Auburn University's College of Architecture,
Design, and Construction also pioneered the nations first Design
Build Master's Degree program, hence capitalizing on The College of
Architecture, Design and Construction's "Building Science" program
with Auburn's "Rural Studio" program where Architectural students
build highly creative and ingenuitive homes for some of the poorest
regions of Alabama. These homes and efforts have been publicized by
People Magazine, Time, featured on Oprah Winfrey, numerous
Architectural and Construction periodicals as well.
Of critical mention
here is the School's Rural
Studio
program, founded by the late Samuel Mockbee.
The Ginn College of Engineering has a 134-year tradition of
engineering education, consistently ranking in the nation's top 20
engineering programs in terms of numbers of engineers graduating
annually. The college has a combined enrollment of close to 4,000.
Auburn's College of Engineering offers majors in civil, mechanical,
electrical, industrial, polymer and fiber engineering, aerospace,
agricultural, biosystems, materials, chemical engineering, computer
science, and software engineering, and—more recently—began a
program in
wireless engineering
after receiving a donation from alumnus
Samuel L. Ginn.
In 2001, Ginn, a noted US pioneer in wireless communication, made a
$25 million gift to the college and announced plans to spearhead an
additional $150 million in support. This gave Auburn the first
Bachelor of Wireless Engineering degree program in the United
States. Auburn University was the first university in the Southeast
to offer the bachelor of software engineering degree and the master
of software engineering degree.

Northwestern view of Auburn
campus
Auburn has historically placed much of its emphasis on the
education of engineers at the undergraduate level, and in recent
years has been ranked as high as the 10th largest undergraduate
engineering program in the US in terms of the number of
undergraduate degrees awarded on annual basis. The Ginn College of
Engineering is now focused on growing the graduate programs, and
recent rankings demonstrate the increasing profile of graduate
engineering education at Auburn. The Ginn College of Engineering
was recently ranked 60th nationally overall and 35th among public
universities that offer doctoral programs in engineering by
U.S. News and World Report. Last year, the
College ranked 67th among all engineering programs and 40th among
such programs at public universities. "America's Best Graduate
Schools 2006" ranks the Ginn College of Engineering's graduate
program in the Top 100 graduate engineering programs in the US.
Auburn's Industrial and Systems Engineering, Civil Engineering,
Chemical Engineering, and Mechanical Engineering were all ranked in
the top 100.
Auburn also boasts strong programs in veterinary medicine,
mathematics, science, agriculture, and journalism. The university's
core curriculum has likewise been
recognized as one of the best in the nation.
Auburn's Economics Department, in the College of Business, was
ranked 123rd in the world in 1999 by the
Journal of Applied
Econometrics. Auburn was rated ahead of such international
powerhouses as INSEAD in France (141st) and the London Business
School (146th). Auburn's MBA Program in the College of Business has
annually been ranked by
U.S. News and World Report
magazine in the top ten percent of the nation's more than 750
MBA Programs.
Nationally recognized ROTC programs are available in three branches
of service: Air Force, Army, and Navy/Marine Corps, the latter
being the only one of its kind in Alabama. Each of these three ROTC
units is ranked among the top ten in the nation. Over 100 officers
that attended Auburn have reached flag rank (general or admiral),
including one,
Carl Epting Mundy
Jr., who served as
Commandant of the US Marine
Corps. Auburn is one of only seven universities in the Nuclear
Enlisted Commissioning Program, and has historically been one of
the top ROTC producers of Navy nuclear submarine officers.
Southwestern view of Auburn campus
In addition to the many outstanding ROTC graduates commissioned
through Auburn, two masters degree alumni from Auburn, four-star
generals
Hugh Shelton and
Richard Myers, served as
Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff in the last decade. Both officers received
their commissions elsewhere, and attended Auburn for an M.S.
(Shelton) and M.B.A. (Myers).
Auburn has graduated six astronauts (including
T.K. Mattingly of
Apollo 13 fame) and one current and one
former director of the Kennedy Space Center
. 1972 Auburn Mechanical Engineering graduate
Jim Kennedy, currently director of NASA's Kennedy Space Center, was
previously deputy director of NASA
's Marshall
Space Flight Center
(MSFC). Several hundred Auburn graduates,
primarily engineers and scientists, currently work directly for
NASA or NASA contractors. Hundreds of Auburn engineers worked for
NASA at MSFC during the peak years of the "space race" in the
1960s, when the Saturn and Apollo moon programs were in full
development.
Auburn
University owns and operates the Auburn-Opelika Robert G.
Pitts
Airport
, providing flight education and fuel, maintenance,
and airplane storage. The Auburn University Aviation
Department is fully certified by the FAA as an Air Agency with
examining authority for private, commercial, instrument, and
multiengine courses. The College of Business's Department of
Aviation Management and Supply Chain Management is the only program
in the country to hold dual accreditation by both the Association
to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB) and the Aviation
Accreditation Board International (AABI). Created over 65 years
ago, Auburn's flight program is also the second oldest university
flight program in the United States.
Auburn University has been recognized as having some of the best
agriculture, fisheries, forestry, and poultry science programs in
the South.
The Old Rotation
on campus is the oldest continuous agricultural
experiment in the Southeast, and third oldest in the United States,
dating from 1896. In addition, the work of Dr. David Bransby
on the use of
switchgrass as a
biofuel was the source of its mention in the
2006 State of the Union
Address.
Modern Healthcare ranked Auburn University’s Physicians
Executive M.B.A. (PEMBA) program in the College of Business ninth
in the nation among all degree programs for physician executives,
according to the Journal’s May 2006 issue. Among M.B.A. programs
tailored specifically for physicians, AU’s program is ranked
second.
Schools and year originated
- College of Agriculture, 1872
- College of Architecture, Design and Construction, 1907
- College of Business, 1967
- College of Education, 1915
- Samuel Ginn College of Engineering, 1872
- School of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences, 1984
- College of Human Sciences, 1916
- College of Liberal Arts, 1986
- School of Nursing, 1979
- James Harrison School of Pharmacy, 1885
- College of Sciences and Mathematics, 1986
- College of Veterinary Medicine, 1907
- Graduate School, 1872
Campus arrangement
The Auburn campus is primarily arranged in a grid-like pattern with
several distinct building groups. The northern section of the
central campus (bounded by Magnolia Ave. and Thach Ave.) contains
most of the College of Engineering buildings, the Lowder business
building, and the older administration buildings. The middle
section of the central campus (bounded by Thach Ave. and Roosevelt
Dr.) contains the College of Liberal Arts (except fine arts) and
the College of Education, mostly within Haley Center. The southern
section of the central campus (bounded by Roosevelt Dr. and Samford
Ave.) contains the most of the buildings related to the College of
Science and Mathematics, as well as fine arts buildings.
Several erratic building spurts, beginning in the 1950s, have
resulted in some exceptions to the subject clusters as described
above. Growing interaction issues between pedestrians and vehicles
led to the closure of a significant portion of Thach Avenue to
vehicular traffic in 2004. A similarly sized portion of Roosevelt
Drive was also closed to vehicles in 2005. In an effort to make a
more appealing walkway, these two sections have been converted from
asphalt to concrete. The general movement towards a pedestrian only
campus is ongoing, but is often limited by the requirements for
emergency and maintenance vehicular access.
The current period of ongoing construction began around the year
2000. All recently constructed buildings have used a more
traditional architectural style that is similar to the style of
Samford Hall, Mary Martin Hall, and the Quad dorms. The Science
Center complex was completed in 2005. This complex contains
chemistry labs, traditional classrooms, and a large lecture hall. A
new medical clinic opened behind the Hill dorm area. Taking the
place of the old medical clinic and a few other older buildings, is
the Shelby Center for Engineering Technology. Phase I of the Shelby
Center opened in the Spring of 2008, with regular classes being
held starting with the Summer 2008 term. A new Student Center
opened in 2008.
Student life
Housing
Auburn's initial Campus Master plan was designed by Frederick Law
Olmsted. For most of the early history of Auburn, boarding houses
and barracks made up most of the student housing. Even into the
1970s, boarding houses were still available in the community. It
wasn't until the
great depression
that Auburn began to construct the first buildings on campus that
were "dorms" in the modern sense of the word. As the university
gradually shifted away from agricultural and military instruction
to more of an academic institution, more and more dorms began to
replace the barracks and boarding houses.
Auburn's first dorms were hardly luxurious. Magnolia Dormitory,
built in the 1950s and demolished in 1987, was once used by the
state of Alabama in its defense against a lawsuit brought by state
prison inmates. The inmates claimed that housing two men in a cell
of particularly small dimensions constituted 'cruel and unusual
punishment.' The state argued in court that students at Auburn
actually paid to live in even smaller living spaces—at Magnolia
Dorm. The inmates lost the case. Its "twin", Noble Hall, used as a
women's residence, was demolished only in 2005 and was condemned
during at least the final year in which it was inhabited.
In the last twenty years, the city of Auburn has experienced a
rapid growth in the number of apartment complexes constructed. Most
Auburn students today live off-campus in the apartment complexes
and condos, which surround the immediate area around the
university. Less than 25 percent of Auburn students live on
campus.
Auburn's on-campus student housing consists of four complexes
located at various locations over campus -- "The Quad", "The
Village", "The Hill", and "The Extension". "The Quad" is the oldest
of the four, dating to the
Great
Depression projects begun by the
Works Progress Administration
and located in Central Campus. Made up of ten buildings, the Quad
houses undergraduate students. Eight of the buildings are coed by
floor, the remaining two are female-only.
"The Hill" is made up of 12 buildings and is located in South
Campus. The Hill houses mostly undergraduates, there are two
high-rise dormitories (Boyd and Sasnett), all are coed by floor
with the exception of Leischuck and Hall M, which are female only.
All of the Hill dormitories were used to house sororities until
2009. The sororities are now housed in the newly completed
village.
"The Extension" is a block of six buildings (labeled A, B, C, D, E,
and F), each consisting of two-bedroom apartments, housing
undergraduates. The extension closed in 2009
"The Village," formerly known as married student housing, recently
housed a variety of students, to include undergraduates, graduates,
and married students. In May 2006, this housing complex was closed
to students and was demolished during the summer and early fall of
2006; however, in 2009 it was rebuilt into 8, 4-story buildings to
accommodate 1,700 residents. This area now houses sororities, and
undergrads.
Greek life
Greek associated students make up roughly 24 percent of
undergraduate men and 34 percent of women at Auburn.
Male Greeks in Auburn are roughly divided into two separate areas:
Old Row and New Row. "Old Row" traditionally was made up of the
fraternities whose houses were located along Magnolia Avenue on the
north side of campus. "New Row" is made up of fraternities whose
houses were located along Lem Morrison Drive southwest of campus.
However, being an "Old Row" or "New Row" fraternity doesn't really
depend on where the house is located but on the age of the
fraternity. Therefore, there are some "Old Row" fraternities with
houses on "New Row" Lem Morrison Drive because they moved there.
Today's "Old Row" on and around Magnolia Avenue was once the "New
Row," as the first generation of fraternity houses at Auburn were
on or near College Street. Most of these houses were demolished by
the end of the 1970s, and only two fraternity houses remain on
College Street today.
There are seventeen sororities represented at Auburn University.
Sorority recruitment is a week-long process held by the Panhellenic
Council in August every year. Sororities are located not in
individual houses like Auburn fraternities, but in the designated
dorms located in The Village. This has the unintended side effect
of keeping dues for these sororities among the lowest in the
nation. Each dorm has a sorority "chapter" room within it for the
sorority designated to that dorm.
Athletics
Auburn University's sports teams are known as the Tigers, and they
participate in
Division I-A of the
NCAA and in
the Western Division of the 12-member
Southeastern Conference (SEC).
Auburn routinely fields nationally competitive teams in
football, men's and women's swimming and
diving,
baseball, women's
basketball, and women's
golf.
Auburn's
colors of burnt orange and navy blue were chosen by Dr. George Petrie,
Auburn's first football coach, based on those of his alma mater,
the University
of Virginia
.
Football
Auburn's football program is currently coached by
Gene Chizik. Past coaches include
George Petrie,
John Heisman,
Mike
Donahue,
Ralph "Shug" Jordan,
Pat Dye,
Terry
Bowden and
Tommy
Tuberville.
In 1957, Auburn was coached by "Shug" Jordan to a 10-0 record and
was awarded the AP National Championship. Auburn's 1913, 1914,
1958, 1983, 1993, and 2004 teams have also been recognized as
national champions by various ranking organizations.
Two Auburn players, Pat Sullivan in 1971 and
Bo Jackson in 1985, have won the
Heisman Trophy. The Trophy's namesake,
John Heisman, coached at Auburn from
1895 until 1899.
Auburn is the only school where Heisman
coached (among others, Georgia Tech
and Clemson
) that has produced a Heisman Trophy winner.
Auburn's
Jordan-Hare
Stadium
has a capacity of 87,451 ranking as the
ninth-largest on-campus stadium in the NCAA as of September
2006.
Auburn
played its first game in 1892 against the University
of Georgia
at Piedmont
Park
in Atlanta, Georgia
starting what is currently the oldest college
football rivalry in the Deep
South. The Tigers' first bowl appearance was in
1937 in the sixth Bacardi Bowl played
in Havana
, Cuba
. As
of 2005, AU football has won six SEC Conference Championships, and
since the division of the conference in 1992, six western division
championships and three trips to the SEC Championship game.
Auburn
plays archrival Alabama
each year in a game known as the Iron Bowl.
Auburn went 11-0 under Terry Bowden in 1993, but was on probation
and not allowed to play in the SEC Championship game. Auburn
completed the 2004 football season with a 13–0 record winning the
SEC championship, the
school's first conference title since 1989 and the first outright
title since 1987.
However, the Tigers were left out of the
BCS championship game in
deference to two other undefeated, higher ranked teams, USC
and Oklahoma
.
The 2004 team was led by quarterback
Jason Campbell, running backs
Carnell Williams and
Ronnie Brown, and cornerback
Carlos Rogers, all
subsequently drafted in the first round of the
2005 NFL Draft. The team gained a new
offensive coordinator,
Al Borges, who led
the team to use the
west coast style
offense which maximized the use of both star running
backs.
During the 2008 season, Tony Franklin, the offensive coordinator,
was let go. After the 2008 season, Tommy Tuberville resigned. On
December 13, 2008, it was reported that
Gene
Chizik had been hired as Auburn's new head coach. It was
reported on December 28, 2008 that Auburn's head coach Gene Chizik
had hired
Gus Malzahn as the Tigers' new
Offensive Coordinator.
Swimming and diving
In the last decade under head coach's
David Marsh,
Richard Quick and co-head coach
Brett Hawke, Auburn's
swimming and
diving
program has become preeminent in the SEC and nationally, with
consecutive NCAA championships for both the men and women in 2003
and 2004, then again in 2006 and 2007. Since 1982, only 8 teams
have claimed national championships in women's swimming and diving.
Auburn and
Georgia each won nine
straight(five Auburn, four Georgia) between 1999 and 2007. The men
won their fifth consecutive national title in 2007, and the women
also won the national title, in their case for the second straight
year. The Auburn women have now won five national championships in
the last six years. As of 2009, the Auburn men have won the SEC
Championship fifteen out of the last sixteen years, including the
last thirteen in a row, and also won eight NCAA national
championships (1997, 1999, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2009).
Coach Marsh, who has been a U.S. Olympic coach, is considered one
of the top three swim coaches in the world, and AU swimmers have
represented the U.S. and several other countries in recent
Olympic Games. Auburn's most famous swimmer is
Olympic gold medalist
Rowdy Gaines, and
also Brazilian
César Cielo
Filho, bronze(100m freestyle) and gold medal(50m freestyle) at
the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games.
As the most successful female Olympic
swimmer Kirsty Coventry (swimming
for her home country of Zimbabwe
) who won gold, silver, and bronze medals at the
2004 Summer Olympics in
Athens
.
While the football team is far more well-known nationally and in
the media, Auburn swimming and diving is the most dominant
athletics program for the university.
Men's basketball
The Auburn men's
basketball team has
enjoyed off-and-on success over the years. Its best known player is
Charles Barkley. Other NBA players
from Auburn are
John Mengelt, Rex
Fredicks,
Eddie Johnson,
Mike Mitchell,
Chuck Person,
Chris Morris,
Wesley Person,
Chris Porter,
Mamadou N'diaye,
Jamison Brewer,
Moochie Norris,
Marquis Daniels, and
Pat Burke.The Auburn University Board of Trustees
approved the building of a new $92.5 million basketball arena and
practice facility. Groundbreaking for the new arena should occur in
the summer of 2008 with the facility opening prior to the 2010-11
season.
Women's basketball
The Auburn University women's
basketball
team has been consistently competitive both nationally and within
the SEC.
Despite playing in the same conference as
perennial powerhouse Tennessee
and other competitive programs such as LSU
, Georgia
, and Vanderbilt
, Auburn has won four regular season SEC
championships and four SEC Tournament championships. AU has
made sixteen appearances in the NCAA women's basketball tournament
and only once, in their first appearance in 1982, have the Tigers
lost in the first round. Auburn played in three consecutive
National Championship games from 1988–1990 and won the Women's
NIT in 2003.
When Coach Joe Ciampi retired at the end of
the 2003–2004 season, Auburn hired former Purdue
and U.S. National and Olympic team head
coach,
Nell Fortner. Standout former
Auburn players include:
Ruthie Bolton,
Vickie Orr, Carolyn Jones, Chantel Tremitiere, Monique Morehouse,
and DeWanna Bonner.
Baseball
Auburn Baseball has won six SEC championships, three SEC Tournament
championships, appeared in sixteen NCAA Regionals and reached the
College World Series (CWS) four
times. After a disappointing 2003–2004 season, former Auburn
assistant coach Tom Slater was named head coach.
Samford Stadium-Hitchcock Field at
Plainsman Park
is considered one of the finest facilities in
college baseball and has a seating capacity of 4,096, not including
lawn areas. In addition to
Bo
Jackson, Auburn has supplied several other players to
Major League Baseball, including
Frank Thomas,
Gregg Olson,
Scott Sullivan,
Tim Hudson,
Mark
Bellhorn,
Jack Baker,
Terry Leach,
Josh Hancock,
Gabe
Gross, and
Steven
Register.
Women's golf
Auburn's Women's Golf team has risen to be extremely competitive in
the NCAA in recent years. Since 1999, they hold a 854-167-13 (.826
win percentage) record. The team has been in five NCAA finals and
finished second in 2002 and then third in 2005. The program has a
total of seven SEC Championships (1989, 1996, 2000, 2003, 2005,
2006, and 2009). The seven titles is third all time for Women's
golf. In October 2005, Auburn was named the #3 team nationally out
of 229 total teams since 1999 by
GolfWeek magazine.
Auburn's highest finish in the NCAA tournament was a tie for 2nd in
2002.
Since 1996, the team has been headed by Coach Kim Evans, a 1981
alumna, who has turned the program into one of the most competitive
in the nation. Coach Evans has helped develop All-Americans, SEC
Players of the Year as well as three SEC Freshman of the Year. She
has led the Tigers to eight-straight NCAA appearances. She is by
far the winningest Coach in Auburn Golf History, having over 1100
wins and winning six of Auburn's seven total SEC Titles. Evans was
named National Coach of the Year in 2003 and has coached 8
individual All-Americans while at Auburn.
Track and field
The Auburn women's track and field team won its first ever national
title in 2006 at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships,
scoring 57 points to win over the University of Southern
California, which finished second with 38.5 points. Auburn posted
All-American performances in nine events, including two individual
national champions and three second-place finishers, and broke two
school records during the four-day event.
Auburn's men's team finished second at the 2003 NCAA Outdoor
Championships and at the 1978, 1997 and 2003 NCAA Indoor
Championships. The women's team finished 14th (2002, 2003) at the
Outdoor Championships and seventh (2003) at the Indoor
Championships.
Equestrian
Auburn's Equestrian team captured the 2006 national championship,
the firstequestrian national championship in school history. Senior
Kelly Gottfried and junior Whitney Kimble posted team-high scores
in their respective divisions as the Auburn equestrian team
clinched the overall national championship at the 2006 Varsity
Equestrian Championships at the EXPO/New Mexico State Fairgrounds
in Albuquerque, N.M.In 2008, the Auburn Equestrian team captured
the 2008 Hunt Seat National Championship. Over fences riders
finished 12-1-1 overall for the week.
Fight Song
Notable among a number of songs commonly played and sung at various
events such as
commencement and
convocation, and athletic games are:
War
Eagle the Auburn University
fight
song.
Traditions
Selected student organizations
Media and publications
- The Auburn
Plainsman – the university's student-run newspaper, has
won 23 National Pacemaker
Awards from the Associated Collegiate Press
since 1966. Only the University
of Texas
' student paper has won more.
- WEGL 91
FM
- The Auburn campus radio station which is open to
students of all majors as well as faculty and staff who wish to
DJ.
- The Southern Humanities Review - One of the leading literary
journals in the region, The Southern Humanities Review has
been published at the University by members of the English faculty,
graduate students in English, and the Southern Humanities Council
since 1967, publishing the work of nationally known authors such as
Kent Nelson and R. T. Smith.
- Eagle Eye TV News - A weekly 30-minute television news program
that is produced by Auburn University students and that airs
on-campus, off-campus, and on-demand at the university
website.
- The Auburn Circle - The student general-interest
magazine. The Circle publishes poetry, art, photography,
fiction, nonfiction, and architectural and industrial design from
Auburn students, faculty, staff, and alumni.
- Glomerata - Auburn University's student-run yearbook
which began production in 1897. Its name is derived from the
conglomeration of Auburn.
- Auburn University Office of Communications and Marketing -
Auburn University's news outlet for media related to the
accomplishments of university faculty, staff and students.
- Auburn University's official YouTube channel - Auburn
University's YouTube channel was announced
on January 15, 2008. It contains a wide variety of videos, from
promotional to educational. AU’s Office of Communications and
Marketing manages the content on the university’s YouTube
Channel.
- www.theauburner.com - Website written by former Auburn
University Students and graduates Mark Paden and Ryan Stephens
General interest
- Auburn University Student Space Program (AUSSP) - The AUSSP is
a student-led, faculty-mentored program to design, build, launch,
and operate spacecraft. Participants launch high-altitude balloons
to the edge of space to test engineering and science instruments,
they build small satellites that orbit Earth, and they are working
with other universities on missions to the moon and Mars. The AUSSP
is made of three groups: the Auburn High Altitude Balloon (AHAB)
group, the AubieSat (Small Satellite) group, and the management
group – involving students who are not majoring in the sciences or
engineering. Many students take Directed Reading in Physics (PHYS
4930) and get credit for participating in AUSSP.
- United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) - Auburn University
is the WFP's lead academic
partner in a recently launched student "War on Hunger" campaign. In
2004, the WFP tasked Auburn University with heading the first
student-led War on Hunger effort. Auburn then founded the Committee
of 19 which has led campus and community hunger awareness events
and developed a War on Hunger model for use on campuses across the
country. The Committee of 19 recently hosted a War on Hunger Summit
at which representatives from 29 universities were in
attendance.
- Cooperative Education (Co-Op) - Co-op at Auburn University is a
planned and supervised program alternating semesters of full-time
college classroom instruction with semesters of full-time paid work
assignments. These work assignments are closely related to the
student's academic program. Thousands of Auburn University
graduates, especially engineering majors, have supported themselves
financially while studying at Auburn by participating in Co-op.
This educational program prepares students for professional careers
by combining academic training with practical work experience in
industry, business, and government.
- The Sol of Auburn - Auburn University's Solar Car Team -
recently participated in the North American Solar
Challenge 2005. On July 27, 2005, Auburn's car crossed the
finish line in Calgary, Alberta, Canada in 4th place in Stock
Class, 12th Place overall. The SOL of Auburn is the only solar car
in Alabama, and the project is organized by Auburn University's
College of Engineering with a team of four faculty and over twenty
undergraduate students.
- The War Eagle Flying Team (WEFT) - A student organization made
up of both pilots and non-pilots. Most team members are
Professional Flight Management, Aviation Management, or Aerospace
Engineering majors. WEFT competes with other flying teams at the
annual National
Intercollegiate Flying Association sponsored Safety and Flight
Evaluation Conference (SAFECON).
- Auburn University Computer Gaming Club - One of the oldest
University Sponsored Computer Gaming Clubs in the USA. Weekly
meetings and semesterly LAN parties.
- Samford Hall Clock Tower - Information on the Samford Hall
Clock Tower, a well known symbol of Auburn University. Also
includes information on the bell and carillon. Note: This page is
not directly maintained by Auburn University.
Notable alumni and faculty members
Auburn in popular culture
- Auburn is visually referenced in the 2004 Lions Gate film A
Love Song for Bobby Long, starring John Travolta and Scarlett Johansson. It is presumed to be
the university where the main character, Bobby Long (Travolta),
used to teach, as he is seen at the beginning of the movie wearing
an Auburn T-shirt and later an Auburn baseball cap.
- Auburn is mentioned in the 2003 Sony Pictures' film
Big Fish, directed by Tim Burton and starring Ewan McGregor, Albert
Finney, Jessica Lange, and
Billy Crudup. The film was based upon
the novel, Big Fish: A Novel of
Mythic Proportions, by Daniel Wallace which makes more
prominent mention of the university. However, Huntingdon
College
in Montgomery, Alabama
, was used as the location for shooting.
- During the opening ceremony of the 2002 Olympic Winter Games in
Salt Lake
City
, Auburn's golden eagle, Tiger (War Eagle VI), flew
into the stadium as part of the celebration.
- In the 1998 HBO movie The Pentagon Wars, Auburn is
referenced in the service record of protagonist Lt. Col. James G.
Burton (played by Cary Elwes) as it is
read back to him by Major General Partridge (played by Kelsey Grammer).
- At the end of the 1987 HBO movie Long
Gone, the protagonist, Jamie Weeks (played by Dermot Mulroney), tells his friend and
mentor, Cecil "Stud" Cantrell (played by William Petersen), that he will probably go
to Auburn now that their minor league baseball season has ended.
The movie is based on a book by Auburn graduate and author Paul Hemphill.
- In the 1984 Lorimar movie Tank,
which starred James Garner and C. Thomas
Howell, an Auburn plaque is mounted on the wall of William's
(Howell) bedroom. The movie was filmed, in part, at Fort Benning
in Columbus, Georgia
, which is about 45 minutes from Auburn.
- Auburn is mentioned in the 1971 TV-movie Brian's
Song, a fact-based film about the friendship of
professional football players Brian
Piccolo (played by James Caan) and
Gale Sayers (played by Billy Dee Williams).
- At the end of the legendary 1940 movie Knute Rockne All American, an
honor roll of coaches who had played for Rockne at Notre Dame scrolls across
the screen, with their names and the universities where they
coached being read. Among these is the name of Jack Meagher, who
coached at Auburn from 1934 until 1942.
- In John Grisham's book The Firm Ray McDeere, brother of
Mitchell McDeere is wearing an Auburn hat as he rides a bus
- Auburn has made a number of cameo appearances in the syndicated
comic strip Kevin & Kell, drawn
by Auburn alumnus Bill Holbrook.
- In the movie The Return of Swamp Thing (1989) the character
Darryl Hallenbeck (played by Daniel Emery Taylor) can be seen
wearing an Auburn t-shirt. This is due to the low budget of the
sequel to Swamp Thing. The characters were encouraged to wear their
own clothes as a part of the wardrobe.
- In the book Swan Song by Robert McCammon an ex-wrestler
nicknamed Black Frankenstein remembers his days of playing football
at Auburn University.
- In the original 1960 Ocean's Eleven movie with the
Rat Pack, the Auburn Vs. Alabama game is
referenced by Dean Martin in a bet.
See also
References
- About Auburn Office of Undergraduate Recruiting and
University Scholarships. Retrieved on 2006-12-13
- A Short History of Auburn University,
1856-1984, retrieved April 2, 2008.
- Anson West, History of Methodism in Alabama
(Nashville: Methodist Episcopal Church South, 1893), 738-739.
- University of Alabama's OIRA Report for 2009, Spring
Semester
- Auburn University's OIRA Report for 2009, Spring Semester
- Auburn University Campus Map -
https://oitapps.auburn.edu/campusmap/ click on each building for
more information.
- Buildings at auburn University
http://www.lib.auburn.edu/architecture/buildings/
- College Football Data Warehouse, Yearly National
Championship Selectors, 1913, 1914, 1958, 1983, 1993, 2004, retrieved July 28, 2008.
- Charles Martin, "AU's Eagle Flies during Olympic Games Opening
Ceremony", Auburn University News, February 8,
2002.
External links