Construction at Bailey and Rather halls on schedule
Construction at Bailey and Rather halls in Brody Complex Neighborhood is on track and about 10 percent complete, university engineer Bob Nestle said Thursday.
Construction at Bailey and Rather halls in Brody Complex Neighborhood is on track and about 10 percent complete, university engineer Bob Nestle said Thursday.
Yesterday, (Scene) Metrospace, 110 Charles St., opened up a new exhibition that runs until Oct. 23. There are two sub-exhibits on display entitled “Raw Materials” and “Skins”.
From one woman to another, MSU students have the chance to spice up their wardrobes by sharing their clothes with their peers next month. The MSU Women’s Resource Center is sponsoring the Woman-to-Woman Sale at the Union Oct.
The 9th annual Kerrytown BookFest runs from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday at the Ann Arbor Farmers Market, 410 N. Fourth Ave. and Kinglsey St., in downtown Ann Arbor.
Forty-five engineering industry leaders have committed to doubling the amount of engineering internships available to students in 2012, according to a release from The President’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness.
Professional writing senior Kevin Marheine stopped by the Earn, Learn and Intern Fair on Wednesday afternoon to find a company where he could get some real-world experience without some of the consequences of a full-time job.
Students preparing to take the Graduate Record Examination, or GRE — an exam required for admission to most graduate schools — are among the first to experience the most drastic changes made to the exam in its history.
About 18 members of MSU’s Graduate Employees Union, or GEU, are paying less for classes this semester through a new 100-credit tuition pool, which offers a waiver of some additional tuition costs.
Henry Brimmer is working to make Grand Rapids a little more green and white.
Chemical engineering sophomore Ibrahim Gulamhusein always had an interest in math and science, but it wasn’t until he arrived at MSU and chose a major that he started to wonder about the type of career he could see himself doing.
The seven Lowrider bikes on display in Snyder Hall’s LookOut! Gallery don’t have many miles on them, but the meaning behind the American Indian-themed vehicles is more of a metaphorical journey than a physical one.
Jim Detjen’s love for environmental journalism began more than 40 years ago during his first newspaper job along the polluted Hudson River in New York when environmental issue stories rarely were displayed in mainstream news.
The Council of Graduate Students, or COGS, is starting off this school year with momentum from the last, working on various initiatives to promote partnerships among graduate and professional students, COGS officials said.
During the holiday weekend, the Pavilion for Agriculture and Livestock Education hosted more than 175 llamas and 40 alpacas during Lamafest 2011, the nation’s second-longest running llama and alpaca show.
MSU’s Neighborhoods initiative opened up new offices in two different campus locations this year, a move officials said is designed to bring more basic services closer to students.
After working two internships, finance senior Catrina Hicks noticed a large number of women in the workplace but few in management positions.
College is a whole new world for many freshmen traveling campus for the first time.
Dereck Perkins has spent the past 15 years helping others do something he loves: make noise.
Kinesiology senior Faraz Anjum had fasted for Ramadan before, but this year was different.
Bricks from the former MSC smokestack have been on sale at the MSU Surplus Store since last weekend, and about 150 are already off the shelves.