Guest Poem: The Day After
By Kyle O'Connor, MSU student and State News Sports Reporter
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.
By Kyle O'Connor, MSU student and State News Sports Reporter
By Sam Klemet, 2007 alumnus
Journalism juniors Kayla Nelsen and Ashley Zhou both previously worked as reporters for MSU’s student-led independent newspaper, The State News. This spring semester, they are studying abroad, but in different parts of the world: Kayla in Athens and Ashley in London.
By: Sylvia Hodges, MSU English senior
When Michigan State played its exhibition game against the USNTDP on Oct. 1, the recorded attendance at Munn Ice Arena was 4,401, almost two thousand under the max of 6,555.
When the shelter-in-place order was lifted early Tuesday morning following the Feb. 13 mass shooting, the first thing I said to our State News adviser was, “I don’t know what I’m supposed to do now.”
Content warning: This story will intricately discuss my experience with sexual violence and reporting it to Michigan State University. Segments of my story will be explicit and may trigger trauma-related responses.
In honor of the 37th National Girls and Women in Sports Day, the women of The State News sports and multimedia desks share what the day means to us. Here are our perspectives on being women in sports and why we celebrate today.
I must open with an unsurprising confession: the modal of my lifestyle comes from a place of privilege.
Before I moved to Michigan State University this fall, I was told, by numerous sources, that the coming months would be the greatest time of my young life. One person told me that “college is gonna be bananas with a capital B.”
During a Nov. 11 game at Munn Ice Arena, Michigan State University hockey senior forward Jagger Joshua was called racial slurs “multiple times” by an Ohio State University player.
My friend Maylee has a reminder on her phone set for Dec. 16 labeled “slap Hannah in face."
MSU is in turmoil.
East Lansing is known as one of the most LGBTQ+ friendly cities in Michigan. With extravagant pride parades during pride month, antidiscrimination laws protecting queer identities and the occasional pride flag around town, it’s not hard to believe this to be true.
At Wells Hall, Universal Studios is a frequent visitor, supplying exclusive movie premiere screeners to the Residence Hall Association and college movie goers. The most recent premiere on Sept. 29 was Billy Eichner and Judd Apatow's new rom com: "Bros."
The MSU Board of Trustees needs to get it together.
Cover. Slippery floor. Flashing lights. EDM remixes. Overpriced drinks. Overcrowded room.
In 1867, the first cow was brought to Michigan State University.
Leading the student newspaper is a task that is both daunting and exciting.
Queen B is back, and she's not messing around.