- LocationMelton Student Center
- DescriptionGeneral assemblies are held each Monday for BSU general body members and the entire campus community.
- Websitehttps://calendar.auburn.edu/event/bsu-general-assembly-1836
More from Events Calendar
- Sep 226:30 PMGeneral Body MeetingGeneral body meeting. Our speaker will come, present for 30?45 minutes about their experience, internship opportunities, and career opportunities with Wayne Sanderson. We will serve food, paid for by the speaker. It will be ordered at a local restaurant, and picked up by a member of the officer team. We will also host our elections for AG Council representatives.
- Sep 227:00 PMAuburn Recovery Community (ARC) MeetingsA meeting for students that are in recovery to have support while on Auburn's Campus.
- Sep 238:00 AMAU Music Project - Private Lesson Program (Fall 2025)Faculty and select graduate students in the department of music offer private lessons to members of all ages in the community.
- Sep 2310:00 AMBeing and Belonging in American Art: 1946/2026Guest curator Elizabeth S. Hawley considers the history of American art through the collection at Auburn University. Pairing paintings from the museum’s iconic Advancing American Art Collection with other contemporary collection objects, this exhibition encourages visitors to ask what being and belonging in American art might mean in the past, the present and the future.
- Sep 2310:00 AMBinh Danh: Advancing American ArtBinh Danh explores his Vietnamese heritage, landscapes and memory through experimental and vintage photography techniques. Chlorophyll prints of the past and daguerreotypes of the present blur the line between history and the now, examining a transformation of American identity.
- Sep 2310:00 AMForeign in a Domestic SenseArtists Natalia Lassalle-Morillo and Sofía Gallisá Muriente gather testimonies and imaginaries of Puerto Ricans who migrated to Central Florida following 2017’s Hurricane Maria. This immersive, four-channel video installation layers fictional and non-fictional narratives, speculating about how community is created anew. The title, Foreign in a Domestic Sense, comes from the 1901 Supreme Court case in which a justice described the island nation as “unincorporated territory” of the U.S.