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MSU

Dorms switch to wireless Internet

With funding from the Residence Halls Association and some technical know-how from MSU computer support staff, Case Hall is the first dorm on campus with a wireless Internet access point. Last year, RHA budgeted $5,000 toward the installation of wireless access points in five residential areas on campus, including Case.

MSU

Students travel to D.C., focus on activism in Sudan

A group of 12 MSU students traveled to Washington on Friday to learn how to turn their concern about the current conditions in Darfur, Sudan, into activism. The students attended the conference "A Call to Action for Darfur, Sudan," sponsored by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

MSU

Team grows, gains experience

In the six years since it was established, the MSU Polo Club has grown from a few players using a wooden horse for practice to almost 30 members with a stable of 15 horses at its disposal. Coach Tom Wisehart said the team began when the Detroit Polo Club approached the MSU Horsemen's Association and offered to help them form a team. "We focused on starting from the fundamentals and going from there," said Wisehart, who played polo as an undergraduate at the University of Connecticut.

MSU

ASMSU assemblies to stay separate

ASMSU officials decided at a joint meeting to pass its amended constitution Thursday to keep the two assemblies separate, despite one representative's plea not to. ASMSU's constitution is a blueprint of how colleges, minorities and progressive students are represented within its system.

MSU

Free AIDS tests offered

To participate in the fifth annual National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness and Information Day, the Black Student Alliance and the Lansing Area AIDS Network, or LAAN, are offering free testing in the Union's Multicultural Center today from 6-9 p.m. The day was created to urge blacks to "get educated, get tested and get involved" with HIV/AIDS activities in their communities said Philip Hilton, senior vice president of fund development and communication affairs at the National Black Leadership Commission on AIDS. Hilton said statistics show that blacks have been disproportionately infected and affected by HIV/AIDS since the epidemic's beginning. "African Africans comprise 12 percent of the nation's total population and 54 percent of all newly reported HIV or AIDS cases," Hilton said.

MSU

Readers cram to 'Midnight'

This weekend, James Madison College students turned cramming into a collaborative art form. The MADhouse at James Madison College sponsored a marathon book reading of Salman Rushdie's "Midnight's Children" on Saturday.

MSU

UAB, Pink Floyd tribute band bring 'Moon' to Oz

By Daniel Thai Special for The State News On Saturday night, munchkins marched to the beat of Pink Floyd. More than 500 students came to the International Center as the sounds of Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" meshed with the sights of Victor Fleming's "The Wizard of Oz" to create the "Dark Side of the Rainbow." Urban legends have been floating around for years about the coincidental occurrences of events when the album and movie are played simultaneously.

MSU

Bill drafted to create undergraduate minors

After more than four months of debate, ASMSU's Academic Assembly passed a bill Tuesday night to support academic minors. Academic Assembly Chairperson Dan Weber said having minors will provide undergraduate students with an incentive to work outside of their field of study. "Most specializations are too limited," he said.

MSU

Terrorism conference to focus on crime law

Experts from across the nation and world are convening at the MSU College of Law for a conference on terrorism and international criminal law. The Journal of International Law is hosting the day-long conference, which begins at 9 a.m.

MSU

Muslim dinner offers music, comedy

Laughter, song and the aroma of Middle Eastern cuisine will fill the Hannah Community Center today. The Muslim Students' Association, or MSA, will host its fifth annual Eid dinner at 7 p.m.

MSU

MSU lacks comprehensive tailgate recycling program

With about 400 cubic yards of waste left on campus after every football Saturday, there is enough to completely cover the field at Spartan Stadium in 3 feet of trash in less than two seasons. While some universities have tailgating recycling programs, MSU has limited abilities to create a program. Only 1-2 percent of all waste from tailgating is recycled, said Pete Pasterz, MSU Recycling and Waste Reduction manager. The only recycling that occurs on game day is for vendor's boxes inside the stadium, Pasterz said.

MSU

Vet Med dean begins CDC job in Atlanta

MSU College of Veterinary Medicine Dean Lonnie King will fly to Atlanta on Friday to begin a year-long stint as the director of the new Office of Strategy and Innovation for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC. "It's a leadership position and involved in establishing strategy and direction for public health," King said.

MSU

Lecture series honors Black History Month

Four civil rights and religious leaders will speak on campus in honor of Black History Month. The fifth annual Visiting Minority Faculty Lecture Series kicks off today and will run every Thursday this month.

MSU

Board meeting moved to recognize holiday

The MSU Board of Trustees' Feb. 11 meeting has been rescheduled a day earlier to accommodate Founders' Day activities. The meeting will begin with finance and policy committee meetings at 2 p.m.