Sculpture celebrates E.L.'s 100th
The agitating noises of construction traveled from the West Village redevelopment to Valley Court Park at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, but during this 2007 East Lansing Centennial Celebration, the sounds were symbolic.
The agitating noises of construction traveled from the West Village redevelopment to Valley Court Park at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, but during this 2007 East Lansing Centennial Celebration, the sounds were symbolic.
Religion and abortion — two topics typically thought of as polar opposites — will come together for a lecture today given by a minister with the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice, a national pro-choice organization.
Students in an ISS class were treated to a first-hand discussion with U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., on financial aid and rising health care and tuition costs and her position on the war in Iraq.
As MSU takes the next steps in restructuring the Academic Governance system to increase faculty voice, students may see a decrease in theirs.
The National September 11 Memorial & Museum Tribute Exhibition visited Michigan’s Capitol Building on Wednesday as part of a 25-city nationwide tour.
It was her love of horses as a child that left Susan Ewart knowing what she wanted to do in life — become a veterinarian.
MSU cafeterias switched ground beef distributors and could be serving ground beef again as soon as Friday evening, university officials said.
Less than seven hours after it started, the United Auto Workers union called off a strike that sent thousands of Michigan autoworkers pacing the picket lines.
East Lansing will seek financial assistance from the state to help families afford housing units in the Virginia Avenue project.
Democratic presidential candidates Sen. Barack Obama, John Edwards, Gov. Bill Richardson and Sen. Joe Biden have withdrawn their names from Michigan’s primary ballot.
About 12,300 recipients have subscribed to the university’s emergency text system that launched about six weeks ago, MSU police said.
Michigan and the nation’s economy, Iran and nuclear weapons, free trade and alternative energy were topics of debate for Republic presidential hopefuls Tuesday evening in Dearborn’s Ford Community & Performing Arts Center. The debate was the first one to feature former Tennessee senator and “Law & Order” actor Fred Thompson.
When gas prices gouged students at more than $3 a gallon this fall, Tim Soule and Colin Shellhorn started selling scooters.
This year’s Nobel Prize for physics winners Albert Fert and Peter Grunberg’s research could potentially allow for more songs on an MP3 player or more memory on a laptop.
Cafeterias across campus continue to increase the variety of food during meals to better accommodate vegetarians. However, some students living in the dorms find it difficult to practice vegetarianism in the healthiest way, even with the updates.
Athletics Director Designate Mark Hollis was asked to attend ASMSU’s Thursday Student Assembly meeting to clear up football student section policy misconceptions.
Vandals smashed the front window of an excavating machine parked on campus last week, causing $500 in damage, MSU police Sgt. Florene McGlothian-Taylor said.
Proposals to extend term limits in an effort to build trust and experience in the Capitol are resurfacing after Michigan’s recent budget dilemma.
MSU will know if it can begin serving ground beef at residence hall cafeterias early this week, MSU officials said.
Classless. Embarrassing. Juvenile. A burden on the reputation of the Spartans. Call it what you want, but MSU students have created a tradition at football games: profanity. From “First down, b——!” to “F—- Notre Dame!” the cheers have caught the attention of past, present and future Spartans.