M The ManeaTer The student voice of MU since 1955 | www.themaneater.com | Vol. 87 Issue 6 | April 7, 2021
LOCAL MUSIC
VACCINE
MU students share COVID-19 vaccine experiences BY SAMANTHA DIETEL Reporter
Claire Rothman
Hitt Records owner Kyle Cook puts new albums on the store’s shelves on Tuesday, March 23, 2021 in Columbia. The store sells a wide range of albums, from wellknown to rare and obscure.
Vinyl albums sit on a shelf in Hitt Records on Tuesday, March 23, 2021 in Columbia. The locallyowned business sells an array of uncommon albums.
|PHOTOS BY LILY DOZIER
Hitt Records’ owner has spent his life collecting vinyls. This love for music is reflected in the unique selection customers find at the store |Story by Elizabeth Derner on 6 READ HALL
Student-led movement fights against plan to demolish Read Hall BY TEAGAN KING Reporter
MU recently announced the MU Space Reduction and Strategic Relocation Plan, which includes plans to demolish the historic Read Hall. A group of history students are challenging this plan through a petition
and social media campaign. Many community members support history students Catherine Hutinett, Jordan Pellerito and Bailey Martin’s mission to save this building’s rich history, starting with a petition that already received over 2,000
signatures in a few weeks. Read Hall, originally constructed in 1903, is named after Daniel Read, the MU president who opened the university to women in 1867. It currently houses the Department of History, but it has served a variety of purposes throughout
its history, including as a 1918 influenza hospital, the university’s student union and the first women’s dormitory at MU. Before the construction of Read Hall, women attending MU had to look elsewhere in Columbia for See Read on 5
Claire Rothman said receiving her second dose of the coronavirus vaccine Jan. 24 lifted a weight from her shoulders. Rothman, an MU freshman who studies human development and family science, was eligible to get the Pfizer vaccine due to her job with MU Health Care and her preexisting health conditions. Rothman’s epilepsy and fibromyalgia have been particularly concerning for her since the start of the pandemic. But after receiving the vaccine, she said she has navigated life on campus more freely. “Epilepsy is a neurological condition that can sometimes be caused by an underlying autoimmune disorder, and given my other health conditions and medications, I honestly don’t know how badly COVID could affect me,” Rothman said. Before getting the vaccine, she said she was wary of traveling around campus and outside her dorm. Even when walking alone outside, she made sure to keep her mask on at all times. “Now it’s a little bit nicer,” Rothman said. “When I’m not walking past other people, I’ll take [the mask] down just so I can breathe better. But it’s less scary touching things like door handles than it was before.” Rothman said despite the challenges of being on MU’s campus, it has been a relief for her, too. Both her mom and sister have autoimmune diseases that put them at higher risk of contracting COVID-19, so visiting home in Burke, Virginia, would increase Rothman’s chances of giving her family the virus. Rothman has not seen her family since before she See Vaccine on 4