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The State Press

Loaded Words Pack Punch

There once was a time when a fag was a fag, a bitch was a bitch and the word cunt was simply an anatomical expression.In recent years, however, loaded words like these have picked up new meanings, transforming them into hurtful insults."Words have a great deal of power; they can bring joy, cause damage and inflict pain," said Barbara Baker, director of the Women's Leadership Institute.


Reginald Bullock speaks to the crowd about his film. Carolyn Rush/ ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR

Documentary draws large crowd at student center

Students celebrated the beginning of Black History Month with food, friends and a film in the student center Thursday night.Narrated and produced by Reggie Bullock, the 25-minute documentary "A War for Your Soul" showed the obstacles that black and white people have overcome since the days of Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks.


The Auburn Plainsman

Pianist charms judges in pageant

The Miss Auburn University Scholarship Pageant began with a curtain rising over the Student Activities Center stage to reveal Miss Auburn University 2009 accompanied by 13 contestants vying for the 2010 title.

The Auburn Plainsman

Females Take Over Theater

A shortage in male actors has left the next Auburn theater production solely to the ladies.Monica Bland, senior in stage management and director of "Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing," adapted the play herself from Judy Blume's book."I sat down last Christmas and turned it into a play," Bland said.

The Auburn Plainsman

Small steps for Haiti

The Auburn chapter of Omega Psi Phi has stepped up to do whatever it can to help the island nation of Haiti after the 7.0 earth-quake last week.For its main fundraising effort, the brothers of Omega Psi Phi hosted a step show and T-shirt sale in the Student Center Friday, Jan.

The Auburn Plainsman

A Meal for Haiti Gathers Money To Support Victims in Haiti

Auburn students helped the victims of the Haiti earthquake by doing what they do best: eating.A Meal to Heal for Haiti, last Monday night in the Student Center Ballroom, fed approximately 1,500 people in four hours.The price for a meal was $5, but attendees were encouraged to donate as much as they could.Pannie-George's Kitchen, a restaurant on South College Street in the shopping center next to McDonald's, provided the food for the meal.Mary Counts, co-owner of Pannie-George's, said she felt honored to be asked to participate in the fundraiser."The support that everyone's shown to be able to come together and help is just wonderful," Counts said.

Auburn University turns roads green

Reclaimed asphalt pavement, RAP, is one of many recycled materials tested at the National Center for Asphalt Technology at Auburn University."The NCAT and its unique programs represent the best in cutting-edge technologies in the field of asphalt research and education," said Jim Killian, director of communications and marketing for Samuel Ginn College of Engineering.

The Auburn Plainsman

Lab turns trash to gas

Auburn University is constructing a gasification unit off of South Donahue Drive that will take farming feedstock and produce fuel, high-value chemicals and electrical power."Our goal is to create a unique pilot-scale facility that will enable our faculty to be leaders in the science of using gasification to convert biomass resources into liquid fuels, high-value chemicals and electrical power," said Steven Taylor, professor and head of bio-systems engineering and director of the Center for Bio-energy and Bio-products.When the unit is finished, it will be the best biomass gasification unit in the Southern U.S., Taylor said."This laboratory will allow us to develop improved methods for creating synthesis gas from biomass," Taylor said.Biomass is separated into categories.Forest biomass comes from places such as pine plantations or logging operations that contain residue from harvesting pulpwood or saw timber.Agricultural biomass includes materials such as switch grass, peanut hulls, pecan shells and poultry litter.Sushil Adhikari, assistant professor in bio-energy, will be conducting research for the gasification unit at the Auburn University Center for Bio-energy and Bio-products."I will be involved in research to understand the effect of temperatures, pressures and biomass feed-stocks such as pine wood and switch grass," Adhikari said.Dave Mills, manager of the bio-energy and bio-products laboratory, has been working in the lab for over a year and a half."We are going to be gasifying multiple feed-stocks, agricultural waste and forest waste to produce liquid fuels from the gas," Mills said.The gasification unit is designed for research, not for commercial sale operation, Taylor said."The system will consume over 100 pounds of biomass per hour and produce as much as 40 cubic feet per minute of synthesis gas," Taylor said.Adhikari will be researching the synthesis gas."Syngas, or synthesis gas, is a mixture of carbon monoxide, hydrogen, carbon dioxide and methane," Adhikari said.The syngas will be studied for its energy content and its cleanliness."Our primary focus is on the processes needed to make these fuels and their overall quality," Taylor said.

The Auburn Plainsman

Lunch and Learn teaches students diversity, acceptance

The Multicultural Center has combined two common college student activities, eating and learning, into one activity, the Lunch and Learn series."It's a program that has been done a little bit in the past, but we wanted to make it more consistent this semester and to try and continue it kind of as a signature program for the Multicultural Center," said Shakeer Abdullah, director of the Multicultural Center.

The Auburn Plainsman

Auburn Ranks Fourth in SEC National Merit Scholarship Report

The Plains have gotten brighter in 2009 as Auburn has nearly doubled its enrollment of National Merit Scholars.Auburn now has 64 National Merit Scholars enrolled, which ranks fourth in the Southeastern Conference and 34th nationally, according to a new National Merit Scholarship Annual Report.

Ashlea Draa / ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR

Students Hula Hoop on Campus

Most everyone enjoys spending a sunny afternoon playing catch or grilling out, but for some Auburn students, those afternoons are best spent hula hooping."It's just something to do when you're bored or it's a pretty day," said Katherine Kimbrell, freshman in nutrition.

The Auburn Plainsman

Students give approval to Village

There's no place like home, and there are no dorms like The Village.After one semester of housing Auburn students, the new facility proves to be the favorite for on-campus living.With the choice of two, three or four bedroom suites, students said these residences are like apartments, only better."It's just like an apartment, really, but you don't have to worry about utilities or water, it's just all in one price," said Jake Padgett, freshman in bio-systems engineering.The separated rooms, open living area and kitchen define The Village, while the other housing areas on campus, The Hill and The Quad, have two types of rooms: single ordouble.

The Auburn Plainsman

SGA writes amendments to Auburn's constitution

Come Feb. 18 any Auburn student who has ever wanted more of a say in what goes on at Auburn will finally have their chance.The Student Government Association has written amendments to the Auburn University constitution, and the final decision of whether it passes is up to the students.Sarah Molony, the SGA vice president, said the proposed updates to the constitution will benefit both SGA and the student body."The updates will be beneficial because not only will it give more students an opportunity to be involved in SGA, but it will bring more accountability for the SGA and all of the Student Activity Projects," Molony said.SGA President Jacob Watkins said the constitutional updates will reconfigure the judicial branch of SGA so students may voice their opinions in an easier fashion, thereby making the members of the branch more accountable for their actions.Molony said some parts of the University Code of Law will receive an update because the practices named in the code are out of date.