'It makes me proud to go here': Spartans support Spartans in 'Spartan Sunday' event
In the days following Monday's mass shooting at Michigan State University, the campus streets and walkways fell cold and empty.
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In the days following Monday's mass shooting at Michigan State University, the campus streets and walkways fell cold and empty.
As the university returns to classes Monday Feb. 20, one week after the on-campus mass shooting that took the lives of three MSU students, some professors are making accommodations to help students.
University officials, leadership and law enforcement shared updates about students' return to classes and safety enhancement considerations at a Sunday press conference, held nearly one week after a mass shooting on Michigan State University's campus.
Carol Love, an MSU alumna from the 1970s, has been spending her time since Monday's mass shooting thinking of ways to bring kindness and positivity to campus alongside her fellow alumni.
Michigan State University will be covering hospital bills for the five students injured in Sparrow Hospital, Deputy Spokesperson Dan Olsen confirmed.
TRIGGER WARNING: This article discusses the mass shooting that took place on the evening of Monday, Feb. 13 on Michigan State University’s campus. We encourage all community members affected by this tragedy to reach out to the free and confidential services offered by Michigan State University and East Lansing, which can be found here.
For many, even those who live hundreds of miles away, East Lansing will always be considered home.
At the end of a week filled with heartbreak and grief for the Michigan State community, Spartan hockey fell in an upsetting loss to Wisconsin, 6-2. MSU finished 3-1 on the season against the Badgers, splitting wins with them this weekend after picking up a commanding 6-2 victory on Friday night.
In the aftermath of the mass shooting on Michigan State University’s campus on Monday, Feb. 13, some students some students fled campus for a place that felt safer — others stayed put, finding comfort in their campus community.
International student John Hao has been identified as one of the five Michigan State University students who remain hospitalized after the mass shooting on Monday, Feb. 13. A GoFundMe was started by his roommate to raise for medical costs.
For international students, the process of "going home" is often a difficult and expensive one, which means they make Michigan State University their home.
There was no way to predict how Michigan State would come out Friday night. Just four days after three MSU students were killed and five others were critically injured on-campus, the No. 17 Spartans powered their way to a 6-2 statement win over Wisconsin.
Comparative cultures and politics junior Amaya Aten brought the same protest sign she used in 2018 at a March for Our Lives rally for Parkland to the Capitol today for the End Gun Violence protest to speak for her own community five years later.
Students will have access to “No Media” signs at 1855 Place and the Spartan Sunday event on Feb. 19 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Michigan State University will be offering a Credit/No Credit grade reporting option for all undergraduate courses for the entire semester following Monday's mass shooting, according to an email sent to faculty members from interim provost Thomas Jeitschko.
Eventually things have to go back to normal. Students will come back to campus, classes will begin and memorials will be cleared away — but what then?
8:32 p.m. is when the first email went out calling students to “Run, hide, fight.”
A Michigan State parent’s association plans to set up a support tent on campus Monday, Feb. 20, as students return to classes following the mass shooting. The tent, tentatively planned to be located near The Rock on Farm Lane starting at 9 a.m., will have snacks, drinks, merchandise, gift cards and hugs available for students.
As Spartans have had time to reflect after Monday's shooting on campus, many are organizing their own protests and vigils to express grief, anger or demands for change.
We all have our own Tom Izzo stories. The moment you first got to meet him, shake his hand and hear his frequently raspy voice in-person. Everyone remembers it.