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Kansas State to host Marquette in 2021 Big 12/Big East Challenge

Theatre Review: The Strand Theater Company s Production of The Most Massive Woman Wins, streaming on Broadway On Demand

L to R: Jess Rivera (Carly), Kaitlyn Fowler (Cel), Molly Boyle (Rennie), and Penni Barnett (Sabine). Photo credit: Glenn Ricci. Written by Madeleine George and directed by Nicole Mullins, the Strand Theater Company’s production of “The Most Massive Woman Wins” is a powerful meditation on women’s deep hunger for respect in a world that frequently denies their full humanity. The cast of four talented actors brings the piece to life with an intensity and emotional range…This is truly a production not to be missed. Set in the waiting room of a liposuction clinic, four women sit anxiously before surgery, attempting to distract themselves until the fear bubbles to the surface and they take turns sharing their stories all brimming with decades of deep hurt and humiliation that convinced them a doctor’s scalpel would take away their pain.

The Cluster takes home nine awards at Georgia College Press Association contest

The staff of The Cluster, the independent student-run newspaper at Mercer University, won nine awards at the Georgia College Press Association Better Newspaper Contest Friday. The Cluster participates in the contest each year. Its staff competes among the largest student newspapers in the state, including Georgia State University’s The Signal, the Georgia Institute of Technology’s The Technique and the University of Georgia’s Red & Black. Editor-in-Chief Emily Rose Thorne, a senior, won first place in the Best News Article – Objective category for reporting on bullying that bisexual students face at Mercer and other Georgia schools. Sports Editor Micah Johnston and Managing Editor Mary Helene Hall take a selfie wearing Mercer Cluster hats. (Image: Mary Helene Hall)

The financial cost of COVID-19: How Mercer is navigating a financially uncertain world

When colleges and universities had to send their students home last March as the reality of the pandemic began to sweep the nation, it added financial considerations that universities nationwide had not prepared for. “It’s inserted a great deal of uncertainty,” Mercer’s Executive Vice President for Administration and Finance James Netherton said. “What kind of money are we going to have to spend coping with COVID that we didn’t budget for? … The list just goes on and on and on and on and on.” When Mercer had to send students home, the university had to provide students compensation for unused food and housing, Netherton said. On top of that, the university spent a considerable amount of money preparing to reopen for the 2020-2021 school year in as safe a manner as possible.

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