GUEST COLUMN: The road to the future can lead through Mount Pleasant
Car culture has been an integral part of American life and especially important to Michigan’s manufacturing history.
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Car culture has been an integral part of American life and especially important to Michigan’s manufacturing history.
Central Michigan versus Western Michigan is a rivalry that dates back to 1907. As someone who was born and raised in Kalamazoo County, I fully understand the magnitude of the heated rivalry between the two schools.
Sometimes, I feel like I can’t have fun without drugs or alcohol.
After an underwhelming installment of the John Madden franchise, it's about time the millions of fans they abandoned to take a stand. However, instead of running to message boards and comment sections to complain, it is time to hit Electronic Arts' pockets.
Let’s go back to March 11, 2020. I saw my barber for a haircut, met my brother and one of our best friends for dinner as a restaurant in Lansing. We walked around Meijer hiding random rolls of toilet paper throughout the store.
The other night, I was playing around with my dad. We were joking, laughing, catching up, reminiscing… all the good things. It’s like I was seeing color for the first time in a while - the happiest I had felt in months.
Since Welcome Weekend, Central Michigan University Facebook parent groups and student Twitter accounts have served up a full buffet of complaints about uncooked chicken, spoiled milk, food shortages and other problem in campus residential restaurants.
Reporter Brendan Quealy, who works at the Traverse City Record-Eagle where I interned this summer, was pushed up against a fence and punched in the face last month while covering an anti-mask rally.
Executive Vice President and Provost Mary Schutten will step down from that role on Dec. 31, having only served in the position for two years.
Many of us have that distinct memory of screaming matches across the dorm room when a friend steals a star in Mario Party. It could be getting a game-winning play in Overwatch or getting blue-shelled in Mario Kart.
Dear Zack,
Homesickness helps me appreciate where I came from.
New students are arriving on campus, parking tickets are being stuck to cars and Welcome Weekend is just around the corner. The Fall 2021 semester is about to begin, but the COVID-19 pandemic is still lingering.
Even after receiving my vaccine, I still feel anxious.
Dear freshmen, if you’re considering it, do it.
We began this academic year knowing that this would likely be the most difficult academic year any of us had ever faced, coming out of a spring and summer of unrest, disorientation and uncertainty.
When I was in middle school, I felt extremely bitter toward anyone that was part of the LGBTQ community. That was probably because deep down, I always knew that I was also a part of that community.
I grew up constantly warned by my mother to stay in groups, look over my shoulder and stick with other women. I’m always on edge at night and I consistently carry pepper-spray with me in public.
During this election, we saw the biggest electoral turnout in U.S. history. Over 66.7 percent of Americans cast their election for president in 2020 and mail-in voting hit an all-time high.
In a March 16 email to campus, university officials announced all CMU employees, are eligible for COVID-19 vaccines, regardless of age or medical conditions. The news spread quickly. In a matter of hours, appointments were filled up for the following weeks.