| The Following information
offers updates on the CoAg teaching program and student activities. For
more information on these stories or on educational opportunities
in the College, contact Bill Alverson, assistant dean, or Bill Hardy,
associate dean, at 334-844-2345 or visit the CoAg Web site at http://www.ag.auburn.edu/.
Accidental Ag Week? Last spring a series of events
all seemed to fall during the same week, which led to the creation
of what may be a new Ag Hill tradition of "Ag Week at Auburn."
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5K race |
Blood drive |
During the week of April 19-23, Ag Hill
was the site for a 5K race, a blood drive, the annual Ag Hill picnic and much
more. These are photos of the fun and fellowship created by these events, which
will be repeated in 2005 and may include additional events that draw students
from across the Auburn campus to learn more about the College of Agriculture's history and programs.
CoAg Students and Faculty Receive Awards
The four top CoAg student awards
went to two graduating seniors, while the SGA Award for Outstanding
Faculty Member was awarded to a veteran member of the CoAg faculty.
Ellen Knight was the recipient
of the President's Award and the Comer Award, while Elisabeth Op't Holt was
recognized with the SGA Outstanding Student Award and the Claude
Hardee Memorial Award. Associate Dean Bill Hardy received
the SGA Outstanding Faculty Member Award.
The President's Award is
presented each academic year to a graduating senior who has excelled
both academically and in extracurricular activities.
Knight, from
Wadley, Ala., graduated summa cum laude with
a B.S. in agronomy and soils and will remain at Auburn University
to pursue her master's degree (see feature
story on Knight).
Knight was also honored through
receipt of the Comer Award for Excellence in Natural Sciences. This award, which
was established in 1923 by former Alabama governor B.B. Comer, recognizes three
outstanding graduates-one in agriculture, one in natural sciences and one in
the physical sciences. To be eligible for the award, students must
have exceptional academic records in an area of study that places
heavy emphasis on the sciences.
Elisabeth
Op't Holt ,
a native of Daphne, Ala., graduated cum laude with a degree
in animal science-pre vet. She will continue as an Auburn University
student as she pursues her DVM degree in the College of Veterinary
Medicine.
Op't Holt was first honored with
the SGA Outstanding Student Award. This recognition was earned because of her
excellence in academic achievement and because of the outstanding contributions
that she made to the programs of the College of Agriculture and Auburn University.
Op't Holt served as president of the Ag Ambassadors
during the past year and helped to guide the organization to one of its most
productive years. She also developed the student track for the annual meeting
of the National Agricultural Alumni and Development Association that was held
in Mobile in June.
Op't Holt also was involved in many other
extracurricular activities.
Op't Holt also received the Claude Hardee
Memorial Award. This award, based on scholarship, leadership and character was
established by the Hardee family to honor the memory of Claude Hardee, a 1936
Auburn graduate.
Associate CoAg Dean Bill Hardy was honored through receipt of
the SGA Outstanding Faculty Member Award for the College of Agriculture.
Hardy has been a member of the College faculty since October 1972
and throughout his career, working with students and helping them
to become successful has been his greatest joy.
CoAg Students Make a Strong Showing in Marketing Contest
The
student marketing team of Auburn University's chapter of the National Agri-Marketing
Association (NAMA) chose Porchetta del Colosseo as their project for the student
marketing competition at the 2004 NAMA National Convention.
During the week of
April 13-16 the team took its marketing plan and visual presentation to the national
convention in Kansas City, Mo. There they competed with 31 other collegiate student
marketing teams from the United States and Canada.
To get to Kansas City the
team worked for a semester and a half developing a written marketing plan and
a complex slide show presentation with an oral script. "We received two hours
worth of credit for two semesters," says Amy
Granger . "Several nights we met in the computer lab in Comer and
everybody spent a lot of time working on it by themselves."
The team was composed
of agriculture economics students Wesley Mims,
Thomas Hall and Granger; agricultural communications students Sara
Borchik and Anna Pitts; and Jessica Brooks ,
a marketing major from the College of Business, and NAMA adviser Bob
Nelson , who is also a CoAg professor of agricultural economics
and rural sociology.
The competition requires that the marketed
product be an agriculture commodity. By applying the same principles professionals
use, the goal is to have the marketing plan ready to send the product into the
marketplace.
Porchetta del Colosseo, a traditional
Italian dish originating from the city of Ariccia, Italy, is a deboned young
pig, rolled in spices then slowly roasted over a spit.
Posing as the marketing
team for an Alabama pork cooperative, the product was marketed to Southern tailgaters
as a substitute for the traditional meats often cooked for tailgating parties.
"The
fact that we were creating a new market, made it hard to research," says
Granger. "There are not a lot of meat products targeted to tailgaters and we
had to do a lot of extra research."
Porchetta del Colosseo has many ties to
Auburn. Ariccia, Italy, and the city of Auburn are sister cities and the new
restaurant at the Auburn University Hotel and Dixon Conference Center has been
named "Arricia." There is also a
connection with the College of Human Sciences, which sends a group of students
to Ariccia each year.
During their first round of judging at
the competition Auburn competed with the overall number one and number four teams,
University of Florida and Kansas State University. To their disappointment they
were out for the rest of the week.
Yet the trip was not in vain, as the marketing
competition was only a part of the entire experience. A career show and luncheon
put students in contact with more than 100 professionals working in different
agriculture industries from around the nation.
Each member left Kansas City with
a wider view of careers in the agriculture industry and each agreed the hard
work and developed friendships were worth the experience.
"NAMA took things we
learned in class and applied them in a real world experience that made it all
make sense," says Borchik.
For 12 years Nelson has been advising the
NAMA student organization and marketing team. Nelson guides his teams to learn
from the process of putting together a professional marketing plan then presenting
it, instead of winning the competition.
"You don't want to do the competition
for the glory of winning, because you'll be disappointed by the luck of the draw.
You do it for the experience," says
Nelson. "Neido Qubein, a speaker at a professional development session during
the convention, got it right when he said, 'You can't get experience unless
you have experiences."
CoAg Hosts NAADA Convention
Visitors from agricultural colleges across
the United States were in Mobile, Ala., June 13-16 for the 2004 National Agricultural
Alumni and Development Association (NAADA) national conference hosted by our
own College of Agriculture.
NAADA is composed of representatives who advance agriculture
through serving alumni, development and student professionals by expanding the
human and financial resource bases of the nation's agricultural colleges.
The meeting drew some 200 professionals
from throughout the United States, reportedly one of the largest NAADA meetings
ever.
Highlights of the conference included an
opening reception featuring a Mardi Gras parade, educational sessions for professionals
and students, guest speakers, agricultural tours and a seafood feast and entertainment
on the battleship USS
Alabama, which is docked in Mobile Bay.
Sponsors who helped fund the
meeting and fill hospitality baskets for the participants included:
Alabama
Agricultural Statistics Service
Alabama Cattlemen's Association
Alabama Dairymen's
Association
Alabama Department of Agriculture and Industries
Alabama (Music
Group) Fan Club-Fort Payne, Ala.-"Sock Capital
of the World"
Alabama Farmers Cooperative
Alabama Farmers
Federation Beekeepers Commodity Division Cotton Commodity Division
Alabama Peanut
Producers Association
Alabama Pork Producers
Alabama Poultry and
Egg Association
Alabama Sunshine
AU Alumni Association
AU Athletic Department
AU Environmental Institute
Cooper King, Jr.
Federal Land Bank Association
First South
Farm Credit
Food Source Biodegradable Fishing Worms
Gold
Kist, Inc.
Ioka Farms, Inc.
John Jensen
Joseph Yeager
Mississippi-Alabama Sea Grant
Consortium
Rudy Paul Yates
Sister Shubert Rolls
Southern Pride Catfish
Stanley and Barbara
Wilson
Stephen Musser
Terminix International
United Bank
Universal Blanchers
AU Equestrian Team Jumps Hurdles to Finish Year
The
Auburn University equestrian team, which wrapped up its second year
as a women's varsity sport at AU with strong showings in regional and
national championship competitions, also garnered top scholastic and
community service honors on campus in the AU Athletic Department's
annual student-athlete recognition program.
At the department's Tiger
Torch Banquet 2004 in May, the 34-member equestrian team was presented
the first-ever Top Tiger Team Award, an honor established this year
by the Student Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) as an annual competition
among all varsity teams.
For the award, all varsity athletic teams
were judged in the categories of academic achievement, community service activities,
support for other AU varsity teams and participation in the Athletic Department's
CHAMPS (Challenging Athletic Minds for Personal Success) Life Skills program,
which equips student athletes with the personal and professional skills necessary
for successful futures.
The equestrian team accumulated high point
totals in all categories and won the overall competition by more than 500 points
over the second-place gymnastics team. Third-place honors went to the volleyball
team.
"The AU equestrian team has been a welcomed
addition to the Athletics Department because it exemplifies all the qualities
a student-athlete should possess," Stacy
Martin, SAAC chair, said.
The Tigers salvaged the season when they claimed
first place at the Southern Equestrian Championship held in Auburn in late March.
At the National Varsity Equestrian Championship in Georgia in April, they finished
second behind the defending national championship Georgia Bulldogs, significantly
better than the seventh place showing the Tigers had at nationals a year ago. Equestrian
scholarships through the AU Athletic Department could become available in the
future.
Funchess Hall Lawn Receiving a Facelift
Working closely
with the Auburn University Landscape Services division and the Alabama Agricultural
Experiment Station's Research Operations division, the College of Agriculture
has been busy landscaping the front "yard" of Funchess
Hall.
Research Operations provided the initial demolition and site preparation
work, while Landscape Services has handled the planting of new sod and shrubs.
This collaborative effort will soon result in a beautiful new entryway for CoAg
students, alumni and visitors. On-campus assistance was provided by CoAg Horticulture
Professor Gary Keever; CoAg Horticulture Assistant Professor Amy Wright; Research
Operations staff Glenn Terrell, Glen Davis, Gerald Frazier, Joe Fulford, Henry
Avery and Buster McGinty; and Landscape Services staff. Donors included Tom
Dodd Nurseries and Beck's Turf Farm (Wayne Bassett.)
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