'We're about to get this tradition back': Cadillac Williams' coaching style impressing current, former running backs at Auburn
Cadillac Williams knows a thing or two about tradition.
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Cadillac Williams knows a thing or two about tradition.
Note: See appended correction.
Ahead of Auburn baseball's season-opening series against Georgia Southern, The Plainsman posed questions for McClain Baxley, daily managing editor for The George-Anne. Here's how he sees the action playing out this weekend inside Plainsman Park.
Two children play on the wooden steps of a creaky building, laughing and squealing as the moon starts to rise. Their mother calls, and they scurry toward her voice, finding their place in the sacred circle as the smell of incense swirls in the air. It is time for what they came for — the ritual.
Snapchat's flash shines light on Will Hastings' girlfriend
When I first contacted Tina Tatum on the subject of bookstores in Auburn, I absentmindedly addressed the email: “Dear Ms. Turner.”
Sometimes french fries poked out of Brooke Joy’s ears, her playful laughter filling the restaurant. Her girlfriend, Jo McCall, would look around to see if anyone else was watching this jokester — this woman who rescued too many dogs and never learned to swim, whose hazel eyes were warmer than cocoa and may have been the easiest thing to look at in the world.
Auburn University journalism lecturer Phillip Rawls wrote his own life story stemming from just a small town in Gantt, Alabama.
Mary Margaret Turton, junior in business analytics and public relations, will be the next SGA president.
From a tall, well-lit office in City Hall, the man who runs the city of Auburn works.
On Groundhog Day, Auburn and Alabama basketball saw their shadows from seasons past. Because for the third straight year in Auburn Arena, a raucous Auburn crowd watched their Tigers easily cruise past the bitter rivals from 155 miles across the state.
In today's Auburn basketball notebook, sports writer Bryce Johnson opines on Tigers senior forward Horace Spencer and his invaluable contributions to Bruce Pearl's team.
Embarrassment isn’t in Chris Lee’s vocabulary anymore.
Excluding a brief one-year hiatus, Janie Adams Boles has spent the past 24 years in Auburn. From being a student to serving in Auburn Athletics, she has loved the Auburn Family throughout.
He doesn’t wear a black leather jacket. His thick, grey hair isn’t spiked but rather clean and brushed toward the left. He sports light-washed, unripped blue jeans, small, frameless glasses, white Nike shoes and sometimes an orange-and-white-striped Auburn polo or a black-and-white Ramones T-shirt, depending on his mood.
One of the best to wear the orange and blue is returning to The Plains.
Auburn is keeping it in the family.
People pile into an empty room, lights dim and anticipation rises as four guys huddle together, ready to step out onto the stage and change the energy of the room in an instant with their music. This is The Brook & The Bluff — four Birmingham natives who came together with a passion for music and an extraordinary natural ability to harmonize.
It’s 4:30 p.m. on Dec. 15, 2005. A Saturday, faintly chilly for Jacksonville, Florida, but that doesn’t stop the crowd from pouring into the Nease High School auditorium, half clad in red and white, the other orange and blue, split down the middle of the rickety bleachers as they argue brazenly over someone else’s life decision to be made in under 30 minutes on national television.
Abby Milliet and Derrian Gobourne were significant figures in Auburn's win over LSU on Friday night, and were recognized by the SEC on Monday as a part of the league's weekly awards.