OPINION: Thanking students for a respectful, safe welcome weekend
This is a letter to the editor from Eric Baerren, president of the Washington Area Neighborhood Association.
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This is a letter to the editor from Eric Baerren, president of the Washington Area Neighborhood Association.
This is a letter to the editor from Student Government Association President and senior Jake Hendricks.
Welcome Central Michigan University students!
Some people get to college and think they need to know exactly what they’re going to major in. At least that’s what I thought when I got to Central Michigan University – but that’s not true.
Woodrow Wilson was serving as the 28th President of the United States. Prohibition of alcohol was approved by lawmakers in Washington D.C. Babe Ruth left the Boston Red Sox to join the New York Yankees.
Everyone always tells you when you start college freshman year that it will fly by. I’m sure the each of the freshman class at Leadership Safari has heard that statement 10 times this week.
Halfway through my summer, an unexpected opportunity came my way.
On a warm, sunny May 4, Central Michigan University looked the same as is has for many commencement ceremonies. Academic buildings were closed and residence halls were emptying.
We are all dying, but inversely, we are also all living.
What’s up, everybody? I’m Dylan Goetz.
As the semester winds down, most students are cramming for final exams and making plans for the summer.
As many of us had seen and heard of the fire that had erupted last week on the 12th-century cathedral of Notre-Dame de Paris, it leaves this historian with a heavy heart.
Something most students probably don’t know a lot about is what Central Michigan Life is and who the people are behind the name.
After new appointments went into effect Jan. 1, there is one less woman on the Central Michigan University Board of Trustees.
This year, I met two women who were drugged at a fraternity house party. They did not report the incident because they were afraid of what might happen if they did.
Every April, the streets on Central Michigan University’s campus and Mount Pleasant are filled with women trying to make a change.
The image of “traditional masculinity” as the drive to be stoic in the face of your opposition, to dominate your competition and aggressively pursue your personal success, despite what some suggest, is not innate to humanity, nor necessary to the survival and health of our society.
Twenty-four student designers. 27 collections. 122 models.
April 1 marks the beginning of sexual assault awareness month.
In 2017, the Department of Justice reported more than 7,000 hate crimes, defined as acts of physical harm and specific criminal threats motivated by animus based on race, color, national origin, religion, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity or disability. Fifty-eight percent of those crimes were racially motivated. The DOJ illustrated a sizable number of hate crimes on the basis of religion (22 percent), sexual orientation (15.9 percent), gender identity (11.7 percent) and disability (1.6 percent).