East Lansing to host late-night local business expo: 'Moonlight ExtravaGRANDza'
The city of East Lansing will be hosting its second annual "Moonlight ExtravaGRANDza" downtown on Monday from 8 to 11 p.m.
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The city of East Lansing will be hosting its second annual "Moonlight ExtravaGRANDza" downtown on Monday from 8 to 11 p.m.
The fraternity and sorority community invited Michigan State students to the annual Greek Fall Welcome Thursday evening, where students and Greek organizations gathered around The Rock on Farm Lane to explore what Greek Life at MSU has to offer.
The Michigan State University Activities Board hosted the 41st Annual UFest Monday night, giving new and returning students an opportunity to socialize and experience what the MSU Union has to offer.
After many Michigan State University students were unable to move into resident halls last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, students were welcomed back to campus, ahead of the fall semester, for move-in week.
Michigan State University has prepared several in-person activities to welcome Spartans physically back to campus this fall.
Michigan State University is home to over 900 student organizations, ranging from academic groups to Greek life to personal support groups.
MSU’s Main Library is made up of four stories, a basement and over seven million volumes, holding a variety of resources that students can take advantage of during their time at MSU.
Each year, Michigan State University holds a fall convocation to welcome incoming students and introduce them to prominent staff. Typically, this event is held in the Breslin Center; however, the university held this year's convocation virtually to comply with COVID-19 guidelines and recent adjustments to the fall semester.
With Michigan State University’s shift to a remote learning model for the fall semester encouraging off-campus students to consider staying home, many who had already signed outside leases were left with questions and frustrations for the coming months.
With much of the performing arts emphasizing in-person interactions, feedback and connections, Michigan State's transition to predominantly remote learning led these students to doing what they do best — improvising.
Even with the recent adjustment to fall semester, MSU leadership has not given up on the authentic Spartan experience every freshman dreams of and has created plans to host their annual fall welcome week extravaganza virtually.
A vast majority of the Michigan State University community has been physically away from campus since mid-March, but the lack of bodies on campus hasn’t stopped news from developing in East Lansing.
Ex-Michigan State President Lou Anna K. Simon will officially retire from the university on Aug. 31, 2019 after 45 years. She will hold the titles of president emeritus and faculty emeritus with a payout of $2.45 million over three years.
What will you be doing on a Sunday in late February, a full six months from now, at 1 p.m.? What about four nights later, a Thursday, at 6:30 p.m.?
Among ever-changing classes, majors, living spaces, roommates, friends and jobs, we face plenty of transitions as students. Some of these adjustments are things we expect, but others aren’t.
What do you think of when you hear “The Netherlands”? Do you think of Amsterdam with its flowing canals and limitless allures? Perhaps you think of windmills, or the rows of tulips so proudly presented in Holland, Michigan. Next time, think field hockey — a sport which the country’s women have dominated.
About a year after the university announced it was going to conduct a presidential search following ex-President Lou Anna K. Simon's resignation, the Michigan State Board of Trustees unanimously voted to approve Samuel L. Stanley Jr. — Stony Brook University president for almost 10 years — as MSU’s next president at a special board meeting May 28. Stanley officially began his term Aug. 1.
In a matter of weeks, we’ll all be settled into our new semester routines. Familiarity and structure can be immeasurably valuable going into the fall for those of us who have part-time jobs, attend clubs or spend time volunteering. Structure can sometimes be needed during summer, but it’s not mandatory.
When I told my family, friends and peers that I had failed microeconomics this summer, no one believed me. I’ve never failed a class before. In fact, I’ve never even come close to failing a class before.
Most Michigan State students spent their summer away from campus, but things involving the university still continued.