Glomerata


6
Feb 12

Glomeratas

Welcome back to the Glomerata feature of the site where we judge books by their covers. And not just any books, yearbooks. This week’s additions aren’t the best covers, unfortunately. “Hey” we’ll look back on this one day and say “it was the 80s.”

That will explain everything.

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This week we’re crossing the Rubicon, and surfing confidently into the 1990s, where those Gen Xers were changing everything. You can actually see that in one of these installments. They used a hologram! Go here for the latest. Visit here for the entire section of Glom covers. Try here for some more in-depth looks at various years.


2
Feb 12

The oldest graduate

When he walked at his graduation at Auburn William H. Holley, like many before and since, shook the hand of the university’s president, Dr. Bradford Knapp. The governor was Bibb Graves. Know those names?

The oaks at Toomer’s hadn’t been planted yet. Toomer’s Drugs was still competing with Homer Wright as the local top druggist. (Wright’s phone number: Nine.) S.L. Toomer simply referred to his place as The Store On The Corner.

Here’s Holley in his 1927 Glomerata:

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Obligatory sports references: George Bohler was coaching both the Auburn football and basketball teams that year. The football team was 1-8, beating only Howard College. Snitz Snider — Olympic track star and future legendary high school football coach — was hurt much of the season. Another key player Babe Taylor — who, as a tackle, dressed at 6-feet-2 and “around two hundred pounds” as a tackle (Auburn’s current punter is bigger) — also had nagging injuries during the down year. Bohler’s basketball team went 3-13. At least the baseball team was posting winning records! Cliff Hare Stadium? Hardly.

The Bank of Auburn, in the back of Holley’s senior Glomerata, advertised four percent on your savings. Burton’s Book Store was the place to get your dusty tomes. J&M was decades away. Samford Hall, Comer, Mary Martin, Smith and Langdon Halls were all a part of campus. Ramsay Hall was brand new. Perhaps you’ll have heard of Holley’s dean: Bennett Battle Ross of Ross Hall fame. That building was still being erected when Holley graduated.

If those things don’t sound conceivable, don’t worry. Auburn’s oldest living alum has a few years on you. Holley celebrated his 105th birthday Wednesday at the Henry County Nursing Home in Dothan (Auburn stuff was everywhere).

His walk into the real world coincided with the beginning of the Great Depression. The 1929 graduate would work as a pharmacist in Abbeville and soon after helped soldiers get their prescriptions in France during World War II. When the Army let him go he settled with his wife and family in Headland, Ala. He became a pillar of that community where he handed out medication until he retired in 1973. His son Bill, a 1971 Auburn graduate, took over the druggist desk. His son has since retired.

Holley’s Auburn kids: Elizabeth (’59) and Bill Jr (’71):

HolleyKids

But the elder Holley refused to slow down long after retirement. He has maintained two farms, one in his hometown of Samson, Ala. and another in Headland. He was famously building fence lines by hand well into his 90s. He has four grandchildren and six great-grandchildren in his life. He maintained his driver’s license well beyond his centennial, “just in case.”

His API diploma, made of sheepskin, still proudly adorns a wall in his bedroom.

As he told Auburn Magazine, learning about Newton’s first law in a physics class has played a big role in his long life. Objects in motion tend to stay in motion. Living Right, he said simply, is the key. He’d know.


17
Jan 12

Glomeratas

Welcome back to the Glomerata section of the site. We’ve entered the suddenly supposedly golden age of the mid-late-1980s.

Glomerata83

Go here for today’s installments. Visit here for the entire section of Glom covers. Try here for some more in-depth looks at various years.


9
Jan 12

Glomeratas

Welcome back to the Glomerata section of the site. We’ve entered the era of Bo Jackson, the 1980s. So we’ll see some “It was the ’80s!” explanations for the Auburn University yearbook. If, that is, you’re inclined to judge an annual by its cover.

Glom80

It is an interesting three-year period. There’s a cover that, to my eyes at least, looks like it would have been a throwback the date it was released. There is a classic, timeless look. And there is something that defies any description outside of Panama City’s fabled Miracle Strip.

Go here for today’s installments. Visit here for the entire section of Glom covers. Try here for some more in-depth looks at various years.


2
Jan 12

Glomeratas

The Glomerata is the annual yearbook of my alma mater, Auburn University. This feature on the site gives a quick glance at the often beautiful and sometimes curious covers of the book, which I collect.

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At this point in the Glomerata feature section we exit the 1970s and step cautiously into the 1980s. In the judging a book by its aesthetic cover as an aesthetic, this is approaching a strange time. But we’ll journey on, undaunted. Mostly because you don’t know what’s coming up. Oh, sure, these next three are fairly sedate as these things go. But soon … soon we find one of the series most surprising outliers.

But that’s for next week. Go here for today’s installments. Visit here for the entire section of Glom covers. Try here for some more in-depth looks at various years.