Word: auburns
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...ways to have their fun. The Harvard Bisexual, Gay, Lesbian, Transgender, and Supporters Alliance (BGLTSA) has turned to an off-campus locale to hold its Friday night party. “Varsity,” the BGLTSA’s final annual dance, has been moved to 45 Mt. Auburn Street next to Tommy’s Pizza. “We hope that prefrosh of all genders and sexualities will come and have a great time meeting others at the dance,” wrote BGLTSA Social Chair Rachel A. Culley ’07 in an e-mail...
...first roundtable session for the reunion was supposed to start at 10:00 a.m., but at half past, the old reporters and staff are still milling about the conference room at Auburn University Montgomery (AUM), thumbing through old issues of the Courier and admiring staff photographer James H. Peppler’s black and white images of poor black farmers, young shopkeepers, and newly registered black voters...
...email from former Courier editor and former Crimson president Robert E. Smith ’62, FM has learned that the former staff decided on Monday, April 3, to start a campaign to ensure that Auburn University Montgomery and other libraries have a complete set of the 175 issues of The Southern Courier. Their new website, www.southerncourier.org, was still under construction at press time...
Four janitors involved in a strike at the University of Miami and several representatives of an international labor union urged the members of the Student Labor Action Movement (SLAM) to use their leverage as Harvard students to help the Miami workers at an event at 45 Mt. Auburn Street this Saturday. More than 100 Miami janitors have been striking for six weeks and 10 have been on a six day hunger strike to protest unfair working conditions and low wages. The janitors are employed by UNICCO Service Company, one of the nation’s largest private facilities maintenance companies...
...Saturday, the former cub reporters swapped stories at an informal roundtable discussion at Auburn University Montgomery. Though there were times when the young journalists risked their lives, former Crimson president and former Courier editor Robert E. Smith ’62 said that violence never deterred them from reporting. “It never occurred to me to be scared,” he said at the outset of the discussion. “I guess we were too busy being journalists...