EDITORIAL: Too much focus on CMED
As Central Michigan University faces enrollment turbulence, budget cuts are an inevitability with such a large reliance on tuition dollars.
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As Central Michigan University faces enrollment turbulence, budget cuts are an inevitability with such a large reliance on tuition dollars.
It has become a dispiriting trend: The student section at home football games is abysmally empty during the second half of every game.
In a lot of ways, Central Michigan University President George Ross' State of the University address last week was structured like a U.S. president's State of the Union speech usually is.
In yet another last-minute deal to avoid a catastrophic, self-inflicted wound on the United States, congressional lawmakers avoided having the United States default on its debt and re-opened the government late yesterday.
Friday’s edition of Central Michigan Life helped to put the cost of skipping class into perspective by showing that by skipping twice-a-week classes, students lose out on at least $35 per session.
Maintaining a diverse campus – not only for statistical purposes, but to genuinely offer an inviting atmosphere for all cultures – is essential to the growth of any college or university.
In a page three article in today's paper, some students express concerns about campus dining hours.
The past several weeks have been some of the most crucial in American history.
Almost every academic college on campus is experiencing financial cuts related to the decline in both overall and freshman enrollment.
Even by their low standards, House Republicans are acting in an embarrassingly reckless manner, and the entire nation looks like it is about to suffer as a result.
Last week, we were tipped off to two Central Michigan University students who created a library for some poverty-stricken students in Maseno, Kenya.
Amidst university budget cuts, faculty cutbacks and an enrollment crisis, Central Michigan University has yet another problem on its hands: the Campus Programming Fund.
In the past several years, an argument in favor of paying college athletes for their time spent on the field has been slowly picking up traction.
University President George Ross said strategic decisions will guide Central Michigan University this year.
President Barack Obama's "red line" in regards to chemical weapons use in Syria has been crossed, and the United States has been backed into a corner with no easy solution.
Protesting fast food workers have a point, even if demanding a $15-per-hour minimum wage is absurd.
It's no surprise what will be on everyone's minds come Saturday.
It might not be pretty, but it's the truth: Central Michigan University is facing some very serious issues right now.
When looking at the university's finances and plans for the future, it almost looks like a tale of two cities.
The expected drop in Central Michigan University's on-campus undergraduate enrollment numbers, expected to be down between 5-7 percent in the fall from fall 2012, is concerning to say the least.