COLUMN: Getting a COVID-19 test at Foust Hall put my mind at ease
During an international pandemic, one can never be too cautious. Getting tested regularly can help keep you and your loved ones safe, even if you are asymptomatic.
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During an international pandemic, one can never be too cautious. Getting tested regularly can help keep you and your loved ones safe, even if you are asymptomatic.
In a typical year, this point of the semester is already stressful. Exams are here, papers are due, those group project deadlines are fast approaching and schoolwork is piling up. Plus, in a year where things are exceptionally different, this point in the semester can be more difficult than ever before.
Students are fighting the COVID-19 global pandemic and racial inequality as a divisive presidential election rapidly approaches. In a time when social media misinformation erodes confidence in the news media, we believe delivering accurate, truthful journalism is of utmost importance to the public.
This is a sponsored letter from VoteAmerica - a nonpartisan nonprofit dedicated to increasing student voter turnout.
We're halfway there.
If we’ve learned anything this semester, it is that attending an institution of higher education during a pandemic is not ideal. There is hope for students seeking some normalcy, though.
It is inevitable.
Central Michigan University alumna Antoinette Lewis is proof that, with creativity, dedication and innovation, change can occur on our campus.
When the question “What do you see when you watch the news at night?” was raised at last night's online lecture, Ibram X. Kendi pointed out the realities of being Black in the United States and the rhetoric that follows.
For the past three weeks, Central Michigan University has been at the forefront of discussions when it comes to COVID-19 in higher education, especially in Michigan.
Welcome Back CMU Students!
I live in a house with my four roommates -- Grace, Jenn, Shelby and Taylor. We all moved in about a month ago, and honestly, it’s been a blast.
Before becoming one of Central Michigan Life's two diversity and inclusion reporters, I was a "floater." I somewhat floated through the semester writing a brief here and there and maybe a full-length article when I had the time to.
Heather Oesterle had a proposal for Micaela Kelly.
I’m going to be honest with you, during my freshman year here at Central Michigan University, I was completely lost. I was an undecided major far away from home who knew absolutely no one.
It’s no secret this school year is going to be unlike any other.
This summer media coverage of the Black Lives Matter movement shook the United States to its core. Coverage of the protests, and riots, prompted hundred of thousands of people worldwide to take to the streets to demand justice and have their voices heard, myself included.
Most people go into college hoping to find a life long best friend in their freshman year roommate. But, that doesn't always happen and that's okay.
My name is Isaac Ritchey, and I'll be at the helm of Central Michigan Life for the Fall 2020 semester.
When I came out as bisexual to my parents, it got pretty dramatic. Going into the details is way too personal for this column, but suffice to say, there were tears shed. Things settled down a week later, but there was one fact that always rang in my mind afterward even to the day of publication.