Telecast a quest for truth, knowledge and values
The question, What does it mean to be human? will be discussed today in a live nationwide telecast of a conference at Harvard University.
The question, What does it mean to be human? will be discussed today in a live nationwide telecast of a conference at Harvard University.
A dream for an improved International Center is starting to become reality for Delia Koo.The addition of a third floor to the center is set to begin in the coming months and preparations, including building a temporary loading dock, are underway.Last fall, Koo donated an undisclosed amount to fund the project and the MSU Board of Trustees later announced the centers academic wing will be renamed the Delia Koo International Academic Center.Koo, who received her masters from MSU in 1954, said the idea originated when the Volunteer English Tutoring Program, which until recently she was coordinator for, needed more space.It will provide a nice place for all international students and scholars to stop and realize that Michigan State University is interested in helping them. Koo said.
Taking turns at high speeds while adrenaline rushes through the drivers body and wind rushes over his or her head. This is how sponsors of MSUs Formula SAE (Society for Automotive Engineering) Race Team described their experiences on a makeshift track Saturday at Lot 89, the commuter lot. The team wanted to recognize those who make the design and construction of the car possible. This is a day to show appreciation to the businesses, faculty and parents that help us out, said Matt Palomaki, team project manager and mechanical engineering senior. Palomaki is one of about 40 MSU students who design, manufacture and race against 135 teams from all over the world every May at the Pontiac Silverdome. Well finish up our final design the first of November, start manufacturing after that and finish by the beginning of May, Palomaki said. Last year, the team finished 25th overall, but came in second place in a category based on design and marketing.
The MSU Department of Physics and Astronomy will continue its Colloquium Series on Tuesday with a lecture from Nobel Peace Prize winner Steven Chu. Chu will speak at 4:15 p.m.
More than 150 students, some armed with rakes and hoes and all with hands and a heart, took to the streets Saturday to volunteer in the Greater Lansing area.MSU and LCC students took part in the annual Into the Street Kick-Off by giving four hours out of their day to provide different services at more than 20 locations.This years theme, United We Stand with Helping Hands, was dedicated to the Sept.
Chi Omega and Delta Sigma Pi will host a benefit soccer tournament Sunday to Make-A-Wish for Karen King. The second annual Karen King Kickoff soccer tournament will raise money for the Make-A-Wish Foundation in honor of King, an MSU student who was killed in January 1997. King was sexually assaulted and killed after being abducted outside a store in Saginaw. Two men were convicted of first-degree murder, first-degree criminal sexual conduct, carjacking, armed robbery, kidnapping and possession of a firearm.
The information superhighway will be driving right through Lansing Community Colleges campus.
Students heading downstairs to the cafeteria and Multicultural Center in the Union are greeted by a mural of 12 faculty members - only one of whom is a minority.And the Council of Racial and Ethnic Students, which consists of executive board members from Black Student Alliance, Culturas de las Razas Unidas, Asian Pacific American Student Organization and North American Indian Student Organization, isnt happy with the display.The 55-foot mural was painted in April 2001 by Okemos artist Lori Lechler as part of a project to create a theme for the cafeteria, with a different mural on each of four walls.The mural, however, is adjacent to the Multicultural Centers entrance.Like many other CORES members, Nasbah Hill, co-president of NAISO, said the wall should depict the essence of the center.It wasnt right to put it up without contacting representatives from the CORES groups to let us know whats going on, the psychology sophomore said.
MSU has received a grant of nearly $1 million from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to participate in an effort to assess treatment and care of stroke. The one-year grant, which is one of four given out by CDC, will fund the Michigan Acute Stroke Care Overview & Treatment Surveillance System, a pilot program to survey stroke victims in Michigan and how they are treated. The other three grants will go to universities in Ohio, Massachusetts and Georgia. Nigel Paneth, chairperson of the Department of Epidemiology, said the Michigan program is not only an MSU project - its a joint effort with the University of Michigan and Wayne State University. This is a really big deal for not only us - but the entire state of Michigan, he said.
A hands-on workshop aimed to help law enforcement professionals lower the rates of one of the largest violations of personal security in America, will be held Saturday and Oct.
The MSU community lost a former professor and associate director to cancer Tuesday. Photography, jazz and traveling enthusiast Dale Brickner came to MSU in 1973 as a professor of labor and industrial relations.
A hallwide vote in Williams Hall earlier this month determined at least two floors will have locks placed on bathroom doors.But Melissa Winchesters wont.Winchester led the lock safety movement after an unidentified man entered a bathroom in Williams Hall at about 9:30 p.m.
The University Activities Board has planned two diverse events for this weekend. Students can display their talents and compete with others Friday at Showtime at the Union: Amateur Night in the Union Ballroom. There are four contest categories - dance, poetry, rap and singing - and a prize of $50 will be awarded to the winner within each category. Its a quasi-talent show trying to touch on all the creative avenues of the students on campus, said Timothy Arbeiter, assistant manager of activities for the board.
Construction workers armed with buckets of black paint, yellow DeWalt power drills and orange caulk guns hustled through hallways Wednesday to prepare the James B.
The Graduate Employees Union will be holding an open house Friday for all graduate students to get to know the purpose of the union and to find out more about its current contract negotiations. The event will be held from 5 p.m.
Olin Health Center is doing its part to help women detect cervical cancer.Although many people may not know about it, the center has been using the ThinPrep Pap Test exclusively for about a year.The test, which is manufactured by Cytyc Corporation, has been found to be significantly more effective than the Pap smear.ThinPrep was implemented at Olin four years after it was approved by the Food and Drug Administration.
A startled smile crept across Larry Sierras face Tuesday as his family, friends and co-workers recognized him as an excellent supervisor. Members of the Bosses Day Committee started at 9:30 a.m.
Three distinguished men have been scheduled to speak at the fall commencement ceremonies which are to be held at Breslin Center. The speakers are Lee Bollinger, president of the University of Michigan; Clark Bunting, vice president and general manager for the Discovery Channel; and Roger Beachy, director of the Donal Danforth Plant Science Center in St.
The chief investigator in the Ted Bundy murder cases of the 1970s will speak in Okemos on Thursday. Robert D.
For the first time tonight, two mothers who experienced similar tragedies will come together to educate students and community members - hoping they wont ever have to experience tragedies like their own.Cindy McCues son, parks and recreation junior Bradley McCue, died of alcohol poisoning after downing 24 shots on his 21st birthday in 1998.Shawn Newsteads son, 24-year-old Brandon DAnnunzio, died Oct.