Legislation not the answer to K2
It never fails that the minute someone finds out a substance can get the populace high, somebody wants to ban it. Can’t we all just sit down and chill out?
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It never fails that the minute someone finds out a substance can get the populace high, somebody wants to ban it. Can’t we all just sit down and chill out?
What’s a person to do when he or she is praised and simultaneously condemned for having a certain body type? Cassie Smith, a 20-year-old waitress at Hooters of America, Inc. in the Metro Detroit area, experienced that firsthand.
The smoking ban is in full effect, y’all. As of May 1, Michigan residents no longer can smoke in public areas.
Summer is the greatest time of the year. The holidays are lacking, but it is impossible to beat the weather and activities that accompany insects buzzing and birds chirping.
Summer is here and it seems we can look forward to three and a half months of mild weather before unreasonably hot and humid temperatures arrive just in time for football two-a-days.
It felt odd to walk out of the Communication Arts and Sciences Building on Thursday after the final class of my undergraduate career. Like most graduating seniors, I was relieved to be done, and felt a bit of sadness as well. But another emotion crept in: regret. I wondered if I really made the most of my time in that building, or in my entire time at MSU. And with graduation one week away, I’m realizing that, yes, I have a few regrets.
In my four years at MSU, I’ve learned a lot of things, most of which came outside the classroom. So many things, in fact, that I don’t even have time for transitions in this piece! So without further ado, everything I’ve learned since arriving in East Lansing as a naive 17-year-old:
Studying is one thing that never has come easy to me. I can’t do it. It’s incredibly hard for me to sit down and focus on something that doesn’t intrigue me to the fullest.
I am introducing myself — again, as it were — to say I will be the Opinion Editor/Opinion Writer for The State News during the summer semester.
I am an animal enthusiast.
As I doodled on my notebook in class and wished I could go out and enjoy the spring weather, I distractedly listened to my professor, and I still could understand her lecture.
Two-thousand and ten has been a very eventful year thus far. President Barack Obama, who has been heavily criticized for promising change and bringing little, has completely revamped health care, signed nuclear accords to reduce arms and also begun efforts to further rein in bankers on Wall Street.
News is a tricky subject to interpret. The daily events of the world around us determine how we think and develop.
It looks like the economy might be coming back around, and it’s the perfect time for Michigan to reinvent itself.
By now you’ve probably heard about the recent militia plot to kill police officers. According to federal investigators, a militia based out of Adrian, Mich., hoped to incite a larger uprising through violent confrontation with federal forces.
Luke Fochtman celebrated his third Christmas in the hospital. Annabelle Kong spent her senior year attending 8 a.m. classes after 5 a.m. wake-up calls for medication and 7 a.m. radiation treatments. Kelly Montgomery balanced cancer treatments with graduate school applications and student organizations.
You probably have many anxiety-ridden questions circling in your mind if you’re a graduating senior. Where am I going? How will I get there? Am I seriously graduating from college already?
How many times can the human race destroy the Earth? That’s the only question that runs through my head every time I hear any discussion regarding nuclear arms control.
The open nature of the Internet has allowed it to become the most important development in collective human knowledge since the invention of the printing press. The Internet has changed how we consume content and allowed ideas to spread much faster than any point earlier in human history. A ruling by a federal appeals court significantly could change the way in which the Internet works in the future.
As a journalism major living in Michigan, I know how difficult it can be in today’s economy to find not only a job, but also a suitable internship beforehand — especially an internship that doesn’t involve just going on coffee runs for the staff or taking out the trash in exchange for college credit.