Making it better
Coming from small, rural beginnings, Mark Doebler said MSU seemed like a big place.
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Coming from small, rural beginnings, Mark Doebler said MSU seemed like a big place.
Spartans are on top again, wrapping up another year of sound sexual health.
As soon as Ethan Davis was admitted to MSU, he set his sights on getting out. An economics freshman taking only core, required classes, Davis now is considered a sophomore credit-wise after loading up on Advanced Placement courses in high school. He’s determined to graduate in three years.
After a summer of renovations to Hubbard Hall’s interior, university officials ushered in a new phase of MSU’s living and learning experience, presenting it to the public during a grand opening event Thursday afternoon.
Last year’s flu season conjures up images of long lines, repeat visits to the doctor and vaccine shortages, but with a new vaccine, local health officials are expecting a much smoother process this year.
In high school, I remember health class teaching sex education with a specific set of phrases such as, “Say no,” “You could die before the age of 25” and “Children are forever.” Safe sex was promoted to cover all the bases, but abstinence was the main push in a classroom full of hormonal teenagers who recently discovered themselves.
Taking her first steps on campus as an official Spartan, psychology freshman Zekiye Salman didn’t know anything about high-tech lasers and alternate dimensions.
The new Olin Health Center office within Hubbard Hall will give students an option for health care that is more conveniently located.
Change. It has been a buzzword thrown around throughout the last few years and has taken people some time to become comfortable with.
Philip Strong, who currently is the assistant dean for Lyman Briggs College, has been named the leader of the Neighborhood Concept pilot project in Hubbard Hall for next year.
To inform citizens about the importance of knowing one’s HIV status, the Michigan Department of Community Health, or MDCH, recognized Sunday’s National HIV Testing Day.
The way people with eating disorders are treated could change after a recent study by MSU researchers.
good news for anyone who did not want to trek out to the MSU Clinical Center on the southern border of campus for a routine check-up.
Plans to move Olin Health Center to the Clinical Center have been dropped in place of integrating health service centers into residential neighborhoods, university officials said Wednesday.
They’re everywhere on campus — white cartoon ducks.
Condoms aren’t something most students are comfortable picking up in public and sexually transmitted infections, or STIs, aren’t something they necessarily want the world to know for what they’re being tested.
When Dennis Liegghio was 14 years old, his father committed suicide. As a young teen, endless feelings of shame and confusion built to the point where he contemplated killing himself. Living in reality, as it seemed to him, was a day-to-day struggle of trying to mask the pain.
Prenursing freshman Charli Head and business freshman Katie Karam, right, answer trivia questions about sexual health as part of a tic-tac-toe game run by Olin Sexual Health Advocates on Wednesday morning at the Union.
Students accustomed to using Spartan Cash for food purchases and tanning salon visits now have a new way to spend their money: at Lansing Urgent Care.
The fifth annual Women’s Health Fair will be held from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Wednesday.