“For the most part, they looked like those official
government seals, except they said ‘fisheries,’”
Lauenstein recalled. “None of them inspired me.”
Actually, they did inspire
him. The AU fisheries graduate student tore out of Swingle,
jumped on his bike, raced to his apartment and produced, in
a mere 90 minutes, what became the winner in that 1977 design
competition—and what to this day remains one totally
cool fisheries department logo.
It’s the word AUBURN,
graphically designed in the shape of fish.
“The idea for the design
started taking shape in my head on my way home,” Lauenstein
recalled recently, 26 years later, from his home in Sharon,
Mass. “When I got there, I sat down and just started
futzing around with a pencil and a piece of paper, and it
came together.”
Actually, Lauenstein didn’t
use just any fish in his logo. He used his favorite fish—the
carp. Indeed, the carp was the word “Auburn” waiting
to happen.
“His eye was the hole
in the ‘A,’ and his pectoral fin made a great
‘u,’” Lauenstein said. “It was perfect.”
Although he had taken a studio
art class in his undergraduate days, Lauenstein didn’t
call on that training too much in creating the winning design.
According to Lauenstein: “It was just a doodle, more
or less.”
A doodle that has stood the
test of time. The AU Chapter of the American Fisheries Society,
which sponsored that logo contest, still features the clever
insignia on all its apparel, which makes those T-shirts and
caps big sellers year after year—even among folks with
no connection whatsoever to Auburn or to fisheries.
That Lauenstein was ever in
fisheries and ever at Auburn University were almost happenstance.
The Boston-area native got a bachelor’s degree in zoology
from Swarthmore (Penn.) College in the early 1970s and then
joined the Peace Corp. During stints working on fish farms
in Nepal and, later, Israel, Lauenstein got hooked on carp
and fisheries.
“When I got back home
from Nepal, I got on a Greyhound and went around the country
visiting universities with fisheries programs,” Lauenstein
recalled. “Auburn had the best program.”
He admits, though, that when
he headed south to the Loveliest Village, he brought with
him an attitude.
“I was a snob from the
northeast; I never expected I would get outstanding and challenging
instruction from a southern school,” he admited. “But
I quickly learned how wrong I was.”
Auburn rated right up there
with the elite prep schools and small Ivy League colleges
he attended, “and at a fraction of the cost,”
Lauenstein said.
After earning his master’s
degree from Auburn in 1977, Lauenstein managed a Colorado
fish farm for a couple of years before going back to school
to earn a master’s in business administration. For 17
years he owned a printing company in Sharon before selling
that last year. His closest connection to fisheries now is
that he heads up water issues for a civic organization called
Sharon Friends of Conservation.
Lauenstein said that, unless
his memory fails him, all he won for his winning logo design
was bragging rights—unless you count the logo-embroidered
baseball cap that AU classmate John Jensen sent him a while
back.
“But that’s OK,”
Lauenstein insisted. “It’s rewarding enough for
me to know people are still enjoying it.”
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