Faculty committee discuss wages, SIRS
Some faculty might have a bigger pay check next academic year if proposed merit and market pool increases are passed by the university.
Some faculty might have a bigger pay check next academic year if proposed merit and market pool increases are passed by the university.
When Alyssa Meyer traveled to Mexico for spring break her sophomore year, she visited a coffee plantation and saw the unsuitable labor conditions the workers experienced.
MSU appears to have dodged the bullet in terms of potentially severe federal funding cuts to a number of university facets and programs.
Competing for a year’s worth of bragging rights by attempting to bake the best chocolate chip cookie, MSU lesbian, bisexual, gay and transgender student groups gathered at the first “Cookie Crunch” on Monday.
Weekends can be a dangerous time in East Lansing — for buildings, cars or anything else left outside.
Lansing resident Liz McMurray, owner of Liz’s Alteration Shop, 1810 E. Michigan Ave., in Lansing, says she has been given a gift by God.
Since she was young, Rebecca Farnum displayed a passion and dedication to the environment.
The tedious process of redrawing Michigan’s legislative and congressional districts kicks off today as lawmakers meet to discuss the process following the state’s census data release last month.
The Campus Interfaith Council, in partnership with the Department of Religious Studies, is sponsoring Religious Awareness Week through the rest of the week.
Students living in residential halls and off-campus housing will have the opportunity to get rid of their waste free of charge in an environmentally conscious manner in the Pack Up, Pitch In, Help Out program sponsored by the university and East Lansing.
Trash bags in hand, fraternities and sororities gathered together to kick off one of the first events of MSU’s annual Greek Week.
The MSU Indian Student Organization, or ISO, turned an Indian folktale into a show filled with drama, dancing and humor Saturday at East Lansing High School, 509 Burcham Drive.
In a sea of backpacks, psychology sophomore Tiana Barrios wrote on a square of cloth the words she could not say to her friend — “You’re amazing just the way you are.” She then hung it in the center of the room.
With a glow stick as a makeshift headband and a black T-shirt drenched in sweat, engineering sophomore Andrew Smith embodied the spirit of the Neon Night Club dance party Saturday night in the International Center food court.
An MSU professor will help shape federal policy about how to get Americans to hit the gym and eat right.
East Lansing residents and MSU students likely will be treated to a dose of warm spring weather this weekend.
Representatives from ASMSU joined other Big Ten students in Washington, D.C., this week for the inaugural Big Ten on the Hill Student Government Advocacy Conference.
With a cup of coffee and final exams appraoching, marketing freshman Kelly Moran studied through the night without a wink of sleep. Moran did well on her exam the next morning, but at the end of the day, she wouldn’t recommend a sleepless night.
Before communication and public relations freshman Kyle McGuire took his first class at MSU, he was aware of the party mentality in East Lansing.
As technology increases with each generation, employers are looking for new ways to reach students.