The Maroon tiger. (Morehouse College, Atlanta, Georgia)
- Title:
- The Maroon tiger. : (Morehouse College, Atlanta, Georgia) 19??-current
- Alternative Titles:
-
- Maroon Tigger
- MT
- Place of publication:
- Morehouse College, Atlanta, Georgia
- Geographic coverage:
- Dates of publication:
- 19??-current
- Frequency:
- Irregular <2019->
- Language:
-
-
- English
-
- Subjects:
-
- African American college students--Periodicals.
- African American universities and colleges--Georgia--Atlanta--Periodicals.
- Atlanta (Ga.)--Newspapers.
- Fulton County (Ga.)--Newspapers.
- Georgia--Atlanta.
- Georgia--Fulton County.
- Notes:
-
- "The Voice of the Students of Morehouse College."--Vol. 2, no. 2 (December, 1926), page 23.
- <October 1942-February 1944>, some issues called Monthly edition.
- Description based on: Vol. 2, no. 2 (December, 1926); title from PDF cover (received via email and viewed August 26, 2019).
- Has some extras and other special issues. Cannot always determine whether these are regularly appearing separate serials on their own.
- Latest issue consulted: [3rd series] 93.5 (April 7-13, 2019) (Issuu.com, viewed August 26, 2019).
- LCCN:
- sn49809884
- OCLC:
- 9918866334902931
- Holdings:
-
Check OCLC WorldCat for more information on this title.
- MARC
- Record
With its foundation in 1898, the Athenaeum became Morehouse College’s first student-led publication. By the 1920s, the paper was a joint-venture edited by students of Morehouse College and Spelman Seminary. The publication was the official organ of the alumni, alumnae, and students of Morehouse College and Spelman Seminary. Each editorial department of the newspaper had two editors; one from each institution. The paper published monthly during the school year and included poems, club activities, editorials, campus news, campus sports, and local advertisements. After the spring semester of 1924, Spelman Seminary was no longer associated with the Athenaeum. In 1925, the Athenaeum was discontinued after Morehouse College students founded the Maroon Tiger. The Maroon Tiger featured events calendars, campus news, editorials, and photographs accompanied by captions. The paper focused on matters concerning Morehouse College. By November of 1996 the Maroon Tiger had begun to publishing a quarterly supplement “to re-visit the tradition of the Afrikan griot by documenting the actions, traditions, iniquities and ideologies of the 21st century Morehouse man.” The Maroon Tiger continues today as a student-run publication at Morehouse College.
Provided by: Digital Library of Georgia