Fifty years later, Kennedy’s speech stays relevant
On a hot summer day in June of 1963, President John F. Kennedy stood before the graduating class of AU to deliver the commencement address.
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On a hot summer day in June of 1963, President John F. Kennedy stood before the graduating class of AU to deliver the commencement address.
For supporters of gay marriage, the scene outside the Supreme Court last week was accompanied by a hopeful atmosphere, in addition to the many great slogans like “Keep Calm and Marry On.”
You gotta hand it to the Republicans: they’re the best politicians in town.
I had the extraordinary opportunity this past Sunday to participate in the largest climate change rally in American history.
I wanted to write this week about Chuck Hagel’s Senate confirmation hearings. I wanted to write about the utter disrespect, callousness and vitriol that was heaped upon the former senator and war hero. I wanted to write about Sen. John McCain’s supreme fall from grace as he unjustifiably attacked first Secretary Hillary Clinton and then former Sen. Hagel for cheap political points.
The American people have just finally exhaled after enduring a long and tiring presidential campaign, and already the talk has turned to 2016. (“Talk” here meaning the blathering of TV’s “talking heads.”)
UPDATE: August 26 at 4:34 p.m.
Students re-launched an undergraduate research journal on April 30 to showcase students’ research and writing talents. The journal was first published seven years ago.
AU students showed their support for the LGBT community by holding a weeklong commemoration of “Day of Silence” from April 9 to 13.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers continued its search for buried WWI-era military materials on AU’s campus over spring break, but this latest effort in the 19-year investigation yielded no results.
Nine more laptops were stolen since The Eagle last reported the thefts on Feb. 14, according to compliance coordinator in the Department of Public Safety Adam Cooper.
Two School of Public Affairs freshmen are working to raise awareness about D.C. statehood on campus.
Correction appended
Correction appended
About 40 laptops have been stolen on campus since the beginning of the academic year, according to Adam Cooper, Public Safety’s logistics and compliance coordinator.
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correction appended
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is launching an investigation into the private student loan industry, which it will publish as a report to Congress.