Know your opponent: Letter from The George-Anne
In a down year in 2016, Georgia Southern was able to hang with Ole Miss for most of the first half and ultimately limit the defeat to 10 points, 37-27.
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In a down year in 2016, Georgia Southern was able to hang with Ole Miss for most of the first half and ultimately limit the defeat to 10 points, 37-27.
Far-left democrats have recently been concerned with shutting down hate speech.
A former member of SGA once told me something that I found bold and exceedingly true. Hunter Gibson, former Executive Vice President of Programs, said, “freshmen are the bravest people I know.” These words might have seemed minuscule to most, but when said to me, my freshmen year, they meant a great deal. As most progress through college, they forget how terrifying it is to step onto a new campus, into a new life, and to do so blindly.
You’re probably getting a lot of advice these days. In conversations that happen about this time every year, family members, former teachers, friends already in college and others eagerly pass along their experiences on what it’s like to move away from home and how to be successful as a university student.
My name is Duncan Asbury, and I have the pleasure of serving as the Interfraternity Council president for 2017. Auburn’s Greek Life is an exciting community to be a part of, and I am thankful for your interest. I have learned numerous lessons throughout my time as a fraternity man at Auburn, and I hope the following tips prove to be helpful in the recruitment process.
I BELIEVE that this is a non-practical world and that I can’t count only on what I earn, therefore I believe in procrastination, hard procrastination.
As summertime approaches, the countdown to Fall Formal Recruitment 2017 becomes an increasingly prevalent topic.
Richard Spencer, a leader in the alt-right movement who wants to speak on the Auburn University campus Tuesday night. University officials have denied his request. Mr. Spencer has stated that Auburn University will "rue the day" they denied him the opportunity to speak on campus.
Congratulations on being unanimously approved by the Board of Trustees as Auburn University`s 19th president.
Congratulations to Auburn for courageously forbidding Mr. Spencer to speak on campus. Controversial views, especially from the despicable Right, should be strictly quarantined. His presence, and that of others of his ilk, should never darken the academic halls of your intellectually rigorous institution.
White nationalist Richard Spencer will be giving a lecture at Foy Hall on Tuesday, April 18. Unsurprisingly, the University administration was too cowardly to have rejected his offer to use Foy Hall.
Recently, Auburn alumnus and now Apple CEO Tim Cook visited campus to speak on inclusion and diversity with the Auburn Family.
In his speech at Auburn last Thursday, Apple CEO Tim Cook spoke on “diversity and inclusion.”
I was disconcerted and appalled by the revelation early this week that a so-called “White Student Union” had formed on Auburn University’s campus with the intent of promoting racist, anti-Semitic and white nationalist ideology.
I observed the installation of Steven Leath as AU’s 19th president at the University Ballroom March 20.
I have just recently read the article about the Sigma Alpha Epsilon chapter here at Auburn.
Addie Smith from North Carolina needs your help.
The recent articles surrounding the appointment of Dr. Steven Leath as Auburn’s next president are both disappointing and frustrating to read as an Auburn student, as well as the former representative of the student body. While it is valuable for students to be informed on the background of their future University president, it is not valuable for the future president to be drug through the mud for the sake of gaining readership.
I heard Auburn University is planning to hire a new president. I also heard you folks were thinking about hiring Steven Leath.
In recent weeks, religious discrimination has once again come to the political forefront. This is because many have described President Trump’s decision to suspend travel from seven Muslim-majority countries as a “Muslim ban.” Some, including White House officials, have pushed back on that characterization. Fair enough. I don’t buy their argument, but it’s not crazy.