Student-filed assaults prove false
MSU police have determined that a report filed by a student who said she was assaulted twice in the same night is false.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The State News' archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
MSU police have determined that a report filed by a student who said she was assaulted twice in the same night is false.
MSU police are investigating whether the attempted assault of a female by an unknown suspect Monday is related to three other attacks in the past three-and-a-half weeks.
In 1976, Coleman Barks was handed a book of scholarly translations from poet Robert Bly and told “these poems need to be released from their cages.”
Student leaders and faculty members have been contacted by the university regarding actions that allegedly violated the university’s anti-discrimination policy.
A student attending Saturday’s football game was punched in the face twice after being harassed by a 24-year-old student, MSU police Sgt. Florene McGlothian-Taylor said. The 18-year-old female student told police she was in Section 14 of Spartan Stadium when the suspect began harassing her. He then punched the victim twice, leaving her with lacerations on her top and bottom lips, McGlothian-Taylor said. An 18-year-old witness confirmed the suspect punched the victim while in the stands. MSU police officers made contact with the suspect, who denied the allegation. The male student was escorted from the stadium following the incident. A police report has been forwarded to the Ingham County Prosecutor’s Office, where charges of assault and battery are being sought, McGlothian-Taylor said.
East Lansing residents will have the opportunity to determine the city’s next generation of leaders today during the 2007 City Council elections. The event features four candidates — incumbents Beverly Baten and Diane Goddeeris, and challengers Roger Peters and Nathan Triplett — vying for three vacant four-year terms.
When Anne Rauscher isn’t tilling her own garden at her Mason home, she’s helping others acquire fresh produce from gardens throughout the Lansing area. As the director of the Garden Project, a program within the Greater Lansing Food Bank, Rauscher organizes volunteers to collect produce from area farms and distributes it to low-income individuals and organizations that serve those in need. Rauscher said it helps fulfill people’s needs for freshly grown food and keeps a focus on local fare.
Eighty-six years ago, it was purely a beauty pageant — its purpose was to get Atlantic City tourists to stay past Labor Day.
From working at Ford Motor Co. to Blue Cross Blue Shield three separate times, DeWitt photographer Richard Johnson has had more than 20 different jobs — and hated each one.
Michigan Republican lawmakers and business leaders came a step closer to abolishing a 6 percent sales tax expansion on services Thursday.
The MSU College Democrats will be storming the dorms until 8 p.m. today encouraging locally-registered students to vote in East Lansing’s City Council elections, while the MSU College Republicans encouraged students to attend the ASMSU-sponsored East Lansing City Council Forum on Oct. 22.
Four years after he was “outed” and honorably discharged from the military, former human intelligence collector Alexander Nicholson said he began speaking out about the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy.
The cardinal rules of cosmetics can be tough to discern, especially when it comes to picking out products that will achieve a natural look or bar-star sparkle.
Barbara Oakley has dabbled in almost every profession, including a Russian translator on Soviet trawlers in the Bering Sea, a captain in the U.S. Army and a radio operator in Antarctica, and she has been dubbed a “female Indiana Jones.”
MSU head coach Mark Dantonio appears to be many things: Tightlipped, dry, dead pan. But Dantonio blasted those character traits at his Monday press conference when discussing the Michigan Wolverines.
An unusual name is currently leading the MSU hockey team in scoring.
Dr. D,
MSU’s Family of Strength Organization offers students the opportunity to make their mark on the global fight against HIV/AIDS, and members are spreading funding and awareness for orphans in Africa suffering from the virus.
This letter is in response to the blogs Reporter sticks with U-M alliances (SN 10/30) and the subsequently posted Andersen clarifies previous blog post written by your very own James Andersen and posted on your Web site. I neither have a problem with Andersen having allegiances to that other school nor do I see anything wrong with The State News posting a blog furthering his position. I understand that the role of any legitimate news source is not to pander to the interests and viewpoints of its readership; instead it should, as you have in part by posting this letter, present multiple views.
Jessica Byrom brought up some interesting points in her letter Only married couples deserve benefits (SN 11/4). She’s right. We shouldn’t be in “in the business of placing value on relationships.” I have a suggestion to solve the problem, although I suspect it’s not what she had in mind. Just eliminate benefits to anyone except the employee themselves. No partners, legally married or not. No elderly parents. No children. Nothing.