GUEST COLUMN: A letter from the BSU president regarding Black History Month
Many people ask, "Why is there a Black History Month?" As many times as I have heard that question, I can still never understand why someone would ask it.
Many people ask, "Why is there a Black History Month?" As many times as I have heard that question, I can still never understand why someone would ask it.
We are called the “United States” because all our states are united in the belief that all are created equal and deserve equal treatment under the law regardless of religion, ethnicity or economic advantage.
On Nov. 7, thousands of Alabamians voted in their perceived self-interests and against their real self-interests as they have done so many times before.
Jack Simms was an Auburn journalism legend. The journalist and author, who was the original chairman of the journalism department, died Tuesday at the age of 89. Here, his friends, students and colleagues remember him.
Just as midterms are ending, SGA is starting to look to the next term of office for elected leadership in the executive and representative branches.
War Eagle! My name is Jesse Westerhouse and I have the incredible opportunity of serving the Auburn student body as SGA President this year.
Get Involved. You are starting a life-changing adventure. Your college experience is a big deal. It’s a good time to think about what you’d like the next year to be about and how you can make the most of it.
No. It is not reverse racism for people of color to be given the tools to reach a goal that whites have had access to because of their privilege.
My students are my life. When I got accepted to Auburn, I knew that I would major in special education and live out my dream of being a teacher.
As Justin's family, we only hope and pray that we may live into his deep love for God and his compassion for people from all walks of life, and to carry on, too, the love he had for Auburn.
More Auburn students than we realize experience mental health-related issues such as chronic anxiety, depression, suicidal thoughts and eating disorders, to name a few.
Auburn University suicide rates are triple what they are expected to be with a student population of approximately 25,000.
Based on the advertisements my friends and I were inundated with, our new scoreboard was financed by Regions, and Built Ford Tough out of Yellawood with some steel from Hyundai.
Kenneth Noe and Jay Hinton are both people who have background knowledge and opinions on the Confederate battle flag that I am interested to hear.
In January, U.S. District Judge Callie V.S. Granade invalidated Alabama’s bans on same-sex marriage, holding that they violated the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Firstly, I’d like to commend the city on a job well done in the planning of and for this summer’s downtown construction.
It is not surprising that someone in the Auburn area was making and distributing the date rape drug GHB.
On behalf of my students, the Glomerata staff, I would like to clarify many points made in your editorial “We Should Get What We Pay For.” I write for my students because you brazenly mischaracterized their work without understanding the issue you raise, at all. For one, you list the wrong distribution dates; but that’s inconsequential.
We call it the Auburn Family. Do we realize that our family is suffering? Do we realize we are allowing our family to go hungry?
The treatment of the article you wrote about Ms. Wright’s sexual harassment case was completely inappropriate.