Glomerata


3
Aug 12

What do ladders, Olympics and football have in common?

I have older memories. I remember a few things that happened in the place where we lived when I was four. That’s about where it starts for me. And it is increasingly foggy up until about … I dunno … 15 minutes ago.

Sometimes I wonder about the false memories. The oldest memory I have, as I have described it, didn’t actually exist. We never lived in a place with a yard like that, I’m told. Did I see Empire Strikes Back in the theater? Or was it a re-release of the original Star Wars? Do I remember the I’d Like to Buy the World a Coke campaign? It started long before I was born, but did it run long enough for me to eventually notice? Or was that some reproduction?

Picking out what is right and what is wrong on the conveyor belt of your brain is like pulling getting that one bad grape. Squishy and bitter. And it puts you ill at ease about the next grape, too. Ancient memory is a tricky thing, but for as long as I can recall I’ve wanted bookshelves with a ladder attached to them:

ladder

I have a lot of books. We turned a room in our home into a library. It has a fireplace. This is serious. We have bookshelves in other rooms because there isn’t enough room in the library. And yet we still don’t have enough books for the bookshelf ladders. You can’t have one. You need at least two. That’s the mark of a good library.

I saw that one in a bookstore today. We hit two today, after a late breakfast. I found the book I wanted at the second bookstore. It wasn’t on the shelf at the first place, but I did see an employee playing checkers on his computer. It was slow. Bookstores here will pick up in the next few days, though, when the college kids come back to town.

You know who doesn’t come back? Anything to Olympic venues. Surf around and you’ll find plenty of complaints about facilities rusting away in Beijing or going to seed in Greece. Apparently they aren’t even showing up to begin with in London:

After a week of unusually quiet streets, idling cabs and easily navigated shops, fears of the Gridlock Games have transformed into complaints about the Ghost Town Olympics.

Experts say tens of thousands of foreign tourists without tickets to the Olympic Games appear to have decided to skip London, bowing to official warnings of stifling overcrowding — a forecast that ignored the lessons of other Olympic host cities that have emptied out during the Games over the past 20 years. In even larger numbers, these experts say, Britons themselves, including tens of thousands who normally commute to work in London, have heeded official appeals and stayed home.

Aside from that timeless crutch of the lazy journalist, “experts say” there are plenty of lessons here. The biggest two are maybe it is a good thing Chicago didn’t get the Games. Maybe bids should be limited to cities with the venues already in place or cities … elsewhere. Boondoogle: not in my backyard.

By the way. I wrote last week about Auburn’s first Olympians. Here is a picture of the first one, Snitz Snyder, taken from the 1928 Glomerata.

SnitzSnyder

He ran in the 400 meter race in 1928. If he had the race of his life — the race he qualified with was a national record, 48 seconds — he might have made the medal stand. For comparison: the world record in 1928 was 47 seconds and the U.S. record today is 43.18.

Snyder came home and became a legendary coach in Bessemer, Ala. He has a football stadium named after him today. The gentleman standing next to him is the great track coach Wilbur Hutsell. The Auburn track and field facilities are named in his honor.

I did a bit of hasty counting today. At one point this afternoon Auburn athletes, as a nation, would have ranked 44th on the all time Olympic medal list. The Tigers are coming after YOU, Kazakhstan. This list doesn’t, of course, count the Jimmy Carter 1980 Games. There were a few guys on that U.S. Olympic roster projected to compete for medals in Moscow. Impressive stuff for a university.

One other Olympic note of limited use, the most retweeted thing I wrote on Twitter today: NASA is landing something on a DIFFERENT PLANET and airing it live. Your move, NBC.

You start noticing third party effects when people you’ve never heard of start retweeting you. When you see it more than a few times you start to wonder about it. I ran that Tweet through a tracker and found it reached something like 28,000 accounts. Of course not all of those people were online at the time, but that’s still a nice statistic for a piece of sarcasm. The conclusion, we’re all happy to complain about NBC.

I began following this Smithsonian blog on Tumblr last week. (Follow my Tumblr, too!) They are quick hits, and mostly pictures. I traded out a few other sites for this one. (I’m trying to cut back.) But this one is worth seeing, and this post today proved it. The person that uploaded it asked “What’d be going through your mind in this photo moment?”

I’d be thinking This is the GREATEST thing that has EVER happened to me!

There aren’t enough explanation points in that air tank. I’d suck it down to 200 pounds in no time.

Speaking of photo essays, the best one of the week is from a Birmingham toddler.

It rained today. Hard. Almost like this:

When the real serious rains blow through now we think about the 2009 West Virginia game. I wrote about that and have some nice pictures to memorialize the day. (Rain was in the forecast and I wisely left my big camera at home that night.) We sat in that over-crowded concourse for an awfully long time and I wondering: How many places could you be crushed like this for … almost an hour now and watch all of these people maintain their good spirits? Not many, I’d bet.

Is it football season yet? We’re only about four weeks away …


10
Apr 12

Glomeratas

We’ve reached the end of my not-complete collection of Auburn University yearbooks. I’ve been sharing the covers here in chronological order. During that time I’ve picked up a few extras here and there, so the last few weeks we’ve been filling in the gaps.

So this is the most recently acquired, and the most recent book I have, the 2010 Glomerata. It is 50 years younger than this handsome old edition:

Glomerata1960

So, check out the 2010 edition. And, until I can find a few more to add to the collection, click through all of the covers in my collection. For details from within a select few volumes, try here. Also, you can check out the university’s official collection.

When new ones show up on my bookshelf, I’ll be sure to add them here too.


3
Apr 12

Glomeratas

We’re winding down my not-complete collection of Auburn University yearbooks. I’ve been sharing the covers here in chronological order, but during that process I’ve picked up a few extras here and there. So now we’re filling in the gaps.

For example, today’s contribution is a 2009 Glomerata. It is 70 years older than the one pictured below, which is 70 years younger than this beauty:

Glom1939

You might say a few things have changed since this book.

Do go check out the 2009 Glomerata. To see all of the covers in my collection, go here. For details from within a select few volumes, try here. Also, you can check out the university’s official collection.


27
Mar 12

Glomeratas

We’re winding down my not-complete collection of Auburn University yearbooks. Having showed them all off here in a chronological, yet piecemeal, method I am now in the process of filling in the gaps. This one, and the next two weeks, are covers from the collection that I’ve obtained since I started uploading them to the site.

For example, today’s contribution is a 1921 Glomerata. It is 75 years older than the one pictured below, which happens to be my freshman yearbook:

Glomerata1996

Things have changed a bit over the decades. Just a bit.

Do go check out the 1921 Glomerata, which in great condition for a 90-year-old book. To see all of the covers in my collection, go here. For details from within a select few volumes, try here. Also, you can check out the university’s official collection.


20
Mar 12

Glomeratas

We’re winding down my not-complete collection of Auburn University yearbooks. There are 115 volumes (or 116, if you count the Chrysalis) in the complete collection. I don’t have them all. But I do have quite a few.

These next few weeks worth of additions to the digitized cover collection is simply filling in acquisitions I’ve obtained since starting this silly project. For example, today’s contribution is Birdie Cline’s 1919 Glomerata. It is 50 years older than the one pictured below and, despite a century’s worth of wear rubbing away the decoration, more attractive than this green thing:

Glomerata1969

Back in 1919, this was your selection of schools at Auburn:

College of Agriculture 1872
Samuel Ginn College of Engineering 1872
Graduate School 1872
James Harrison School of Pharmacy 1885
College of Veterinary Medicine 1907
College of Architecture, Design & Construction 1907
College of Education 1915
College of Human Sciences 1916

The catalogue pointed out “The region is high and healthful, noted for its general good health and freedom from malaria.” The community was entirely dry. (The entire state was voted “bone dry” in 1915). The library was lit by electricity! And heated by steam! (It was a Carnegie.) There was no tuition for in-state students. Religious services were required daily. If you’d failed two classes you couldn’t go to sporting events.

Things have changed.

Of Birdie Cline the Internet tells us little. She would have been an upperclass student in 1919. She enrolled in 1915 according to the old catalogs. She was from Lee County, as almost all of the few female students (Auburn had been co-ed for 27 years.) were in those days. They graduated less than 100 students in 1918. Four or five were ladies.

Do go check out the 1919 Glomerata. To see all of the covers in my collection, go here. For details from within a select few volumes, try here. Also, you can check out the university’s official collection.