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Back from the Front
CoAg Student Will Hurd
Returns
from Iraq
By Lesley Bebeau
Spring Semester Intern
When Will Hurd, a senior in agriculture economics, went overseas to war
for 11 months, he kept up with what a true Auburn fan always keeps in
mind--Auburn football.
The Grand Bay native took with him his
original songs, his innate charm and the courage to have experiences
that few people will encounter.
Hurd was part of the Reserve Officer
Training Corps (ROTC) and the National Guard at the same time when his
unit in the National Guard was called to war. He took a leave of
absence from the ROTC, where he was waiting to finish his degree after
completing the training in 2003, so he could be with his unit.
Though Hurd was not required to go to
Iraq because he was still considered a soldier in training without his
degree, he couldn't imagine staying behind. Hurd says he had been a
member of his Guard unit for about four years when the call came to
deploy. If they were getting called, he wanted to go with them.
Though he was in Iraq for almost a year
(returning in January of 2005), Hurd didn't lose touch with Auburn. He
kept in contact with the CoAg Asso-ciate Dean Bill Hardy, who Hurd says
was behind him 100 percent when he decided to go to Iraq.
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Will Hurd.
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Former student council president of the
CoAg, Hurd worked the graduation breakfast right before he went off to
war, where Hardy presented him with an Auburn flag and told him he
could take it to Iraq.
"I told him I'd take it with me and I'd
fly it," Hurd says.
The flag made it safely to the Middle
East and flew on a camouflage pole, but not for long. The first night
it was up a rule was made that flags must be taken down because the
enemy was shooting at them.
Hurd moved from base to base in Iraq.
Sometimes it was to pick up supplies, other times it was to move
locations. From the Iranian border to Baghdad, he saw more than he ever
expected.
"What really hurts you is when going
from one base to another you go through a city where you see little
kids running around no shoes on their feet it's just like you see on
TV," Hurd says.
He explained that soldiers are told not
to throw food at the kids. If the food doesn't make it all the way to
the kids and lands in the street, the kids will still run to get it and
could be hit by a car.
"You're really not supposed to throw
them food, but you want to," Hurd says.
Hurd is not only a dedicated soldier,
but he is a songwriter, too. His guitar was shipped to him once he was
settled at his base, and the first infantry that he was attached to had
members who formed a band and had their equipment shipped as well. Hurd
joined the band, totaling five soldiers, and ended up playing for
thousands of troops and opening up for a rock group known as Puddle of
Mud.
After Hurd joined the band he composed
his own song titled "I'm Coming Home."One night in Kuwait his unit was
talking about reasons why they joined the National Guard and why they
thought they were overseas serving our country.
"What we all realized we had in common
was that we all wanted to get back home and see our families. That
really inspired me right there to write that song," Hurd says. "It hit
real well with the troops."
Hurd ran into a delay on his journey
back to the States. The night he was supposed to depart for home was
the night of the Nokia Sugar Bowl Auburn versus Virginia Tech. He
decided to miss his flight so he could watch his home team play ball.
Flights were hard to get and Hurd says people looked at him like he was
crazy once they found out he was staying just to watch football.
"You don't understand," Hurd says was
his response to his fellow soldiers.
He regularly had access to the Internet,
checking out Auburn's perfect season. Hurd was also able to watch the
Auburn versus Georgia game and says football was probably the biggest
thing he kept up with while overseas.
The first thing Hurd did when he
returned to the States was kiss the ground. He says it was good not to
see sand anymore, and it was also good to be back in familiar
territory.
"Any time you go to a foreign country
for a lengthy amount of time, it's just a big change," Hurd says. "It
gives you a greater respect on the freedoms that we hold over here that
a lot of times we take for granted everyday. It makes you view things a
lot differently."
Almost as soon as Hurd returned to the
States, he started being as productive as he was before he left Auburn.
He is currently involved with a joint operation between the United
Service Organization (USO), which supports the troops, and the College
of Agriculture. Their purpose is to raise money and donate it to the USO.
"When I was in Iraq, we received care
packages from people we didn't even know," Hurd says. "This will be
something good that I can get the CoAg involved in and give me a chance
to give backÑbeing on the giving end instead of the receiving
end."
When Hurd gets free time he likes to use
it for relaxing. The hardest thing Hurd had to deal with when he got
home was to get back in the swing of things, especially jumping right
back into school.
"Before I left I was always a fast-paced
person and I stayed involved, always going 90 to nothing," Hurd says.
When I got over there (Iraq) things kind of slowed down a lot. So I get
back over here, I'm use to the slow pace, and it's like everything
picked up where I left off. Whenever I get a chance I just want to
relax.
Hurd became familiar with his
surroundings while being at war for almost a year. Going across the
world can change someone's views on just about anything.
We need to step back and take a look at
everything that we have and cherish it. There are so many people in so
many countries who don't have the luxuries we have, that we take for
granted every single day, Hurd says.
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USO
Will Hurd, a CoAg senior majoring in
agricultural economics who returned recently from Iraq, is leading a
new charge these days. He is heading Operation Auburn Cares, an effort
to raise money for the United Service Organization (USO).
Hurd and other CoAg students and clubs
are conducting a variety of projects to raise the money.
The main goal for the campaign is to
help the troops," says Hurd. "We have been sending out letters over the
past few weeks to try and get people's support and donations". In
addition, Hurd and others have been soliciting donations on AU's Haley
Center Concourse and at local businesses.
"The USO meant a lot to me while I was
over there," he says."They really did a lot to make us feel a little
closer to home. Whether it was from care packages sent to us or some of
the entertainment that came and performed for the us, it made all of us
feel appreciated."
The goal is to raise at least $1,000.
Seventy percent of the money raised will go directly to the USO and 30
percent will be used for local community service projects. Donations of
any amount are welcome. Donors giving $200 or more will receive a
commemorative plaque. To contribute to the CoAg USO campaign, contact
Hurd at 334-524-7703 or hurdwil@auburn.edu. Donations also can be
mailed to Bill Alverson, assistant CoAg dean, at 107 Comer Hall, Auburn
University, AL 36849.
CoAg's
Devin Dotson Wins Student Employee of the Year
Devin Dotson, a CoAg senior majoring in agricultural
communications, was named the Student Employee of the Year by Auburn
University and the Southeastern Association of Student Employment
Administrators.
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Auburn
University Student Employee of the Year Devin Dotson
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Dotson was one of seven CoAg student
employees who were nominated for the awards. The nominees included
Chris Bagents and Lori Bice, who are employed in the Department of
Agronomy and Soils; Anna Carmack and Simon Snyder, who are employed in
the Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology; Clay Jones and
Dotson, who work in the CoAg administrative offices; and James Vance,
who works in the Computer Technology Unit.
The AU Student Employee of the Year program encourages
student supervisors to nominate one student employee or work-study
student who not only balances work and academics but also exceeds
expectations in their contributions to university offices and
departments. Students are scored on their reliability, quality of work,
attitude, longevity in the position, adaptability and uniqueness of
contribution.
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President
Richardson Proclaims Ag Week at Auburn--AU Interim President Ed
Richardson recently signed a proclamation making April 18-22
Agriculture Week at Auburn University. Pictured at the signing are from
left (seated), CoAg Associate Dean Bill Hardy, Richardson and current
CoAg Student Council President Barret Stephenson; (standing) CoAg
Assistant Dean Bill Alverson and incoming CoAg Student Council
President Grace Smith. Photos of Ag Week festivities will be featured
in the summer issue of Ag
Illustrated.
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AWARD
WINNER—David Wilson, center, AU associate provost and vice president
for Outreach, displays the 2005 Humanitarian Award that the AU College
of Agriculture's Cultural Diversity Committee presented to him recently
during the annual committee-sponsored African American Legacy program.
The program that followed the award presentation featured seven
successful African Americans who recounted how they achieved their
professional successes. Wilson, the first African American to hold a
vice presidency at AU, received the Humanitarian Award in recognition
of his contributions to community and his example as a role model for
other African Americans. Among his leadership roles, Wilson, a native
of Marengo County in Alabama's Black Belt region, currently serves on
Alabama Gov. Bob Riley's Commission for Action in the Black Belt. With
Wilson are (left) Bill Hardy, CoAg associate dean, and James Brown,
horticulture professor and Cultural Diversity Committee chairman.
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Studying
Abroad
Horticulture, Animal
Sciences Students Gear Up for England
By Jamie Creamer
Two departments in the College of Agriculture will blaze
new trails this summer when they launch the college's first-ever
study-abroad programs for undergraduates.
Both the Department of Horticulture and the Department
of Animal Sciences' study-abroad opportunities will be based at
Myerscough Agricultural College in Bilsborrow, England. But the
similarities in the two programs basically end there.
In the horticulture program, which will run from June 1
through July 15, a dozen rising juniors and seniors will pack 13 hours'
worth of required courses or professional electives into an intensive
six-week stint that will include class time and lectures; hands-on
experience and training in British landscape garden design, care and
maintenance; and weekend travel throughout England and parts of Europe.
“The academic aspect of this program will deliver the
same course content a student would receive in the corresponding
courses at Auburn,” AU horticulture professor and program organizer
Jeff Sibley says. “But the cultural experience and the historical
aspects of this will be unparalleled.”
In addition to numerous tours of public and private
gardens that the principles of modern landscape design were built upon,
the experience will give students a concise overview of Great Britain's
political systems, agricultural and horticultural industries, natural
resources and growers' associations.
Over the six-week period, five AU horticulture
faculty—including Sibley, Amy Wright, Dave Williams, Raymond Kessler
and Luther Waters, who did the preliminary groundwork that made the
venture possible—will participate, with one faculty member at a time
residing at the college.
“That's another objective of the program: enhancing the
teaching program in the Department of Horticulture,” Sibley says. “The
faculty who participate will be able to bring home their experiences
and incorporate them into their classroom lectures, so that they can
share them with all of their students.”
The animal sciences study-abroad offering, meanwhile, is
for students interested specifically in expanding their experiences in
equine science. The month-long program, which begins July 1, will
include class time and lectures, with afternoons that will be filled
with hands-on experience and training in British-style riding and
handling. Weekends will be open to allow students to experience British
culture in other venues or to travel to other places of interest in the
surrounding area. Students can earn 10 elective academic credits for
the trip.
Sibley says study-abroad programs such as these are
crucial because they enhance the opportunities for future employment.
“This experience will increase the competitiveness of
our graduates in a job market in which more and more companies are
looking for graduates who comprehend today's global economy,” Sibley
says.
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AU Horticulture Students Make
Solid Showing in National Competition
By David Williams
HF Professor
It is the landscape horticulture version of college
basketball's March Madness.
Twenty-eight horticulture Auburn University (AU) Tigers
joined nearly 800 students representing 53 other colleges and
universities in fierce competition on the door step of our nation's
capital when the University of Maryland in College Park hosted in March
the Professional Landcare Network (PLANET) 29th annual Student Career
Days.
The Student Career Days event is the largest of its kind
and includes three days of competition, fellowship, educational
workshops and job interviews. Formerly the Associated Contractors of
America (ALCA), PLANET represents the merger of that association with
the Professional Landcare Association. Representatives from more than
100 companies were busy setting up events, judging competition and
recruiting some of the best landscape students in the country. Our
students are among the most highly regarded, and this year's group
represented us well.
AU has participated in the Student Career Days since
1991 and each year the field of competition has become larger and
stronger. This year, our Tigers qualified for all 24 events ranging
from Annual and Perennial Identification to Wood Construction. In the
end Auburn University placed 17th overall. That standing represented
10th place among the comprehensive universities. That finish was good
enough to place second only to Mississippi State University among the
five Southeastern Conference schools that were represented.
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Nelson
Rains and Adam Barbe debrief after completing a patio in the Paver
Construction event.
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Final standings of SEC schools at
PLANET Student Career days were: Mississippi State University, 7th;
Auburn University, 17th; University of Georgia, 20th; University of
Kentucky, 22nd; University of Tennessee, 31st; and University of
Florida, 44th.
These A.U. students finished in the top
20 in the following events:
Arboriculture Techniques, 6th place,
Josh Clark and Richard Ogle; Compact Utility Loader, 14th place, Bo
Jones; Maintenance Cost Estimation, 16th place, Matt Nielson;
Irrigation Assembly, 9th place, Myers Lacy and Tom Warren; Irrigation
Design, 20th place, Tom Warren; Irrigation Trouble-shooting, 18th
place, Tom Warren; Landscape Installation, 20th place, Myers Lacy,
Richard Sluznis and Zeb Stewart; Paver Installation, 5th place, Adam
Barbe and Nelson Rains; and Sales Presentation, 15th place, Matt
Nielson.
Our students' interaction with industry
was outstanding. All the students were required to interview for intern
or career positions at the career fair, and many were sought by
industry personnel later for follow-up interviews. While the
competitive events are always fun and exciting, it is through
opportunities for industry interaction such as that offered at the
Career Days that the students and industry invest in their future.
Thanks to the following who contributed
to the students' travel to the event this year:Advanced Mowers
Alabama Nurserymen's Association
Blackjack Gardens
Brickman Group, Ltd.
Davey Tree Company
Dixie Green, Inc.
Dodd and Dodd Nursery
Flowerwood Nursery, Inc.
Greene Hill Nursery, Inc.
Green Thumb Nursery
Greenway Plants
High Grove Partners
Hunter Industries
Kinney Nursery
Lott Nurseries
McCorkle Nurseries
Minus Vinus Nursery
Moore and Davis Nursery
Pike Family Nursery
Plant World Nursery
Shore Acres Plant Farm
TruGreen
Valley Crest Landscape Development
Pursell Technologies, Inc.
Wright's Nursery and Greenhouse
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