Holiday travel season nearing
For some people, holiday travel can be frustrating and overwhelming, but after four years of travel to and from California, economics senior Dave Walsh has little to complain about.
For some people, holiday travel can be frustrating and overwhelming, but after four years of travel to and from California, economics senior Dave Walsh has little to complain about.
This fall, MSU College of Law students, such as second-year law student Lee Schuchart, are helping hundreds of Lansing-area tenants keep their homes.
When marketing senior Jeff Lough heads home to Marshall, Mich., for Thanksgiving break, one of the events he’s looking forward to the most is happening before the actual holiday occurs. “Thanksgiving eve,” a night known for its heavy bar and restaurant traffic, serves as a time for students who return home to reunite with hometown friends and catch up as the holiday season officially kicks off.
For members of the Students Allied for Freedom and Equality, or SAFE, the Palestinian student activist group on campus, being on the opposite end of the world didn’t seem to be far enough to keep them away from tensions currently impacting their home.
After major changes to the 2015 Medical College Admission Test, or MCAT, MSU premedical students might have a bigger workload, but it could better prepare them for their career in the field of medicine.
Dr. Gerald Urquhart, assistant professor in the Lyman Briggs College and the Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, will head into the rainforests of Nicaragua for one purpose: to help save an endangered species known as Baird’s tapir, which are related to elephants. They have been eating farmers’ crops and have been largely hunted by farmers.
On Sunday night, the MSU Indian Students Organization performed its annual display of Indian culture, Sargam, at Wharton Center’s Pasant Theatre.
About 200 people of all ages and backgrounds — women, men, students and community members — gathered in the Union to learn about how far women have come, and inspire women to further strengthen themselves and become leaders of the future.
Attending a school with so many programs rated as some of the best in the nation, MSU students are trying to turn a first-class education into a professional career.
Impact 89FM radio station’s finances are being further questioned by MSU governance groups.
What do you do when 2 billion people show up for dinner?
Although the job market for new college graduates will see an increase of about 3 percent this academic year, university officials said some employers still are wondering if the economy is stable enough for companies to continue to hire.
When white flurries fell upon East Lansing earlier this week, most Michiganians knew it was just the beginning.
On Thursday, mainstream fashion trends were delivered to MSU’s campus, courtesy of VIM Magazine.
Students overflowed Wharton Center’s Pasant Theatre on Wednesday at the 40th annual Black Power Rally to see Angela Davis, a famous and controversial activist, speak to the campus community.
This weekend, interdisciplinary studies in social science senior Rob McGuire will not be in East Lansing, but on his family’s farm, hopefully experiencing what some hunters call “buck fever.”
After issues with the radio station’s financial reporting and lack of communication, Impact 89FM radio station manager Aaron Young said the station is trying to improve relations with the Council of Graduate Students, or COGS, and MSU’s undergraduate student government, ASMSU.