Where to drink without draining the bank: Inexpensive East Lansing bars
For many students, drinking is a major part of the college experience. But when you’re on a budget, paying cover and up to $10 per drink can add up very quickly.
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.
For many students, drinking is a major part of the college experience. But when you’re on a budget, paying cover and up to $10 per drink can add up very quickly.
It’s not uncommon for students to graduate tens of thousands of dollars in debt.
This upcoming March, we will commemorate Equal Pay Day. This day is meant to represent the additional days it would take for an American woman to make the same as what their male counterparts made the year prior.
Each year, The State News and The Michigan Daily, the student newspaper at U-M, play touch football and exchange dueling columns on the rivalry ahead of the MSU vs. U-M football game. Read this year’s columns from State News spring sports editor Chase Michaelson and Michigan Daily managing sports editor Max Marcovitch.
As we celebrate yet another week that aims to bring awareness to the issue of mental health, we should take into consideration how prevalent that issue is in society and on college campuses. This Mental Health Awareness Week, there should be dialogue surrounding how many of our peers deal with mental health issues on a daily basis, how it affects their lives and how it impacts their academic performance.
I’m a person who needs to be kept busy. If I’m alone and bored, I fall into a long, seemingly never-ending spiral of thoughts. Thoughts that can begin in any direction and eventually result in feelings of loneliness and hopelessness.
It’s been years since I’ve battled an eating disorder, but I still struggle with body image issues on a day-to-day basis.
Take a moment and think about how many things you have to do to apply to a university like Michigan State.
You might not be interested in the East Lansing City Council election Nov. 5. Most students aren’t, and turnout is historically low. But the candidates are certainly interested in you.
College athletes generate more than $1 billion in revenue, and receiving scholarship money — as well as other perks provided to them by universities — just isn’t enough. Compared to how much revenue they’re generating — money that’s going into other people’s pockets — it isn’t even close to the fair compensation they deserve.
"Boo!" to you from the The State News crew.
Welcome to The Dinner Table podcast, where we bring conversations to the dinner table that your family wouldn't.
Upon talking to some of my colleagues about Day of the Dead, it was shocking to hear a celebration I hold very near and dear to me written off as a "Mexican Halloween."
It’s no secret to anyone who knows me that I love Halloween. The scary movies, the creepy clothes, the pumpkin... everything. I love it.
Halloween is an annual holiday loved by most. With endless candy, spooky decorations, haunted houses and fall festivities, what is there to dislike?
Let’s call things what they are, Michigan State.
As the university takes part in the national It’s On Us Week of Action initiative, created to raise awareness of sexual assault on college campuses, its important message affects our community a little differently. Especially for anyone who’s paid attention to what’s been happening at our university for the past three years.
When shopping for dorm or college supplies, it can be difficult to determine what you need and what you can live without.
Just over a month into my sophomore year, I’m finally getting settled into my apartment. I live with three of my close friends in a four bedroom, four bathroom living space in the relatively new Skyvue apartment complex.
Going into my freshman year, I thought I needed to stay in the dorms. For convenience, the experience and everything in between. A little more than a month after I moved in, I came to the realization that maybe dorm housing wasn’t in my best interest.