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  2. Toomer's Corner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toomer's_Corner

    Toomer's Corner is named after businessman and former State Senator Sheldon Toomer, a former halfback for the first Auburn squad in 1892. [5] Toomer founded Toomer's Drugs in 1896, which was started with a $500 loan from John Reese, and Toomer later founded the Bank of Auburn on the corner of Magnolia Avenue and College Street in 1907. [ 4 ]

  3. Celebrating Auburn fans can once again heave toilet paper ...

    www.aol.com/news/celebrating-auburn-fans-once...

    Auburn fans will once again be able to celebrate victories by rolling the oak trees at Toomer's Corner with toilet paper. Auburn had asked fans not to roll the new trees after their planting in ...

  4. Harvey Updyke, man who poisoned Auburn trees, dies at ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/alabama-fan-harvey-updyke-the...

    Updyke called into the Paul Finebaum Show in 2011 to confess his crime. He spent time in jail after pleading guilty in 2013.

  5. Michael Welner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Welner

    Harvey Updyke, a fanatic of Alabama Crimson Tide football, was charged with poisoning the iconic trees at Auburn University's Toomer's Corner in 2011. [ 55 ] The case reflected on the forensic psychiatric significance of fans' response to emotional defeats, as evidenced by the Auburn defeat of Alabama in November 2010, [ 56 ] and the social ...

  6. Auburn University traditions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auburn_University_traditions

    Toomer's Drugs is a small business on the corner that has been an Auburn landmark for over 130 years. The Auburn tradition of rolling Toomer's Corner. After their planting in 1937, two massive old-growth oak trees hung over the corner. [6]

  7. Did Auburn football fans roll Toomer's Corner to celebrate ...

    www.aol.com/news/did-auburn-football-fans-roll...

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  8. Tebuthiuron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tebuthiuron

    In 2010, tebuthiuron in the form of Dow AgroSciences Spike 80DF was deliberately used in an act of vandalism to poison the live oak trees at Toomer's Corner on the Auburn University campus following the 2010 Iron Bowl.

  9. Prayer at Jordan-Hare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prayer_at_Jordan-Hare

    Adding insult to injury, on April 23, 2013, Auburn's landmark oak trees at Toomer's Corner were cut down, declared unsalvageable after being poisoned by Harvey Updyke, Jr., an Alabama fan, during the weekend of December 3, 2010.