LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Don't forget about state politics
Recently, all the attention has been on Washington D.C. and the 2016 election.
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Recently, all the attention has been on Washington D.C. and the 2016 election.
A traditional view of politics upholds it as a noble practice where citizens unite to make decisions about how society is to be governed for a common good. This vision of society requires political institutions that allow citizens and communities the power to live according to their values.
Susan Brinson sent this letter to her class addressing a student’s anonymous letter about a class discussion regarding the presidential election results.
Imagine this: you leave your family, your friends, your home, your country, the food you love and the very culture that raised you to get on a plane and fly across the world to a new country.
Last week, Justin Timberlake took a selfie in a Memphis polling booth. Under Tennessee law, it was illegal to take that photo.
Zach St. Clair is a recently graduated alumnus of Auburn. He is a part of the May 2016 graduating class.
Summer has finally come to an end but the election season is entering its home stretch. The candidates are 46 days away from the election, but there is still time for everyone to have their voice heard.
I’m a Texas Aggie class of ‘72 graduate who has returned home from his first road trip to Jordan-Hare Stadium and the Auburn vs. Texas A&M football game on Saturday.
As you already know, last spring the Student Government Association worked with Auburn Athletics to make a few changes to the student ticketing policy.
Welcome back to campus!
Bravo to Dannial Budhwani for his eloquent complaint in the Aug. 18 Plainsman.
If you are a student at Auburn University, you have probably at one time or another had an issue with changing your major, class requirements or scholarship funds. It is likely that you have bounced from one administrative office to another, each time hoping that this next person will be able to help you overcome the necessary bureaucratic hurdles. Often, the process is frustrating and tedious, though not usually harmful.
It’s been a tough summer. Not just for any one community or country, but for millions of people around the world. Tragedy appears pervasive in our global society today — acts of terror, human suffering, systemic suppression of minority groups. It’s enough to stir up emotions in anyone.
I still can’t believe that my four years at Auburn are coming to an end.
Reverse racism is a term that I have been seeing a lot lately. In the midst of the #BlackLivesMatter movement, many white people have been defending the fact that they want the movement to just go away by saying (or tweeting) things like, “A black kid from my high school got a scholarship and I didn’t ... racism, man.”