Former COGS president calls for re-do of earlier election
The former president of the Council of Graduate Students, or COGS, called for a reelection during a special meeting Wednesday night to discuss the charges leveled against him.
The former president of the Council of Graduate Students, or COGS, called for a reelection during a special meeting Wednesday night to discuss the charges leveled against him.
In less than two decades, a former MSU economics assistant professor has gone from lecturing classrooms of students to briefing the president. Ed Montgomery, an MSU economics professor from 1986-90, was named director of recovery for auto communities and workers last week by the Obama administration.
The MSU Office for International Students and Scholars will honor deceased MSU student Don Ausman at its third annual Globie Awards today. The ceremony is scheduled for noon in The Spartan Club, located on the fourth floor of Spartan Stadium.
Capital Area Transportation Authority, or CATA, has announced that buses will not run on Sunday in observance of Easter. Additional changes will be made to several routes on Saturday night.
Although the men’s basketball team fell short Monday, local business owners said they were winners in terms of sales thanks to the team’s appearance in the NCAA championship game. At Student Book Store, 421 E. Grand River Ave., MSU shirt sales skyrocketed and led to a measurable increase in business, said Mike Wylie, assistant manager at SBS.
ASMSU’s Academic Assembly failed to meet quorum at its final meeting of the 17th session Tuesday, which killed bills to change the assembly’s code of operations. ASMSU is MSU’s undergraduate student government.
Yash Pal Kapur, an accomplished professor who received accolades worldwide in the field of medicine, died Tuesday. The professor emeritus, 82, was the chairman of the Department of Surgery in the College of Human Medicine.
Students and faculty gathered for a professor’s “last lecture” Wednesday night, but they were not taking notes or attending a class. As part of the ASMSU-sponsored Last Lecture Series, Steve Sharra, a visiting assistant professor in philosophy and peace and justice studies, spoke about his home country of Malawi and the lessons he learned from his time there.
MSU painted a troublesome picture of the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum’s future on Wednesday, saying it didn’t expect to break ground on the project until March 2010, more than a year and a half later than originally planned.
A 19-year-old male student reported his Gateway laptop computer stolen Sunday from his West Akers Hall room, MSU police Sgt. Florene McGlothian-Taylor said.
After tabling a scheduled vote on whether to use public right-of-way to acquire a property for its Avondale Square project, East Lansing City Council members will have to wait to complete construction of the project’s west alley.
The arrival of spring and deep NCAA Tournament runs by the MSU men’s basketball team used to be signs of impending disturbances in East Lansing. However, police and university officials are hoping two celebrations within the last week they deemed as “peaceful” might signal progress in their efforts to improve a reputation tattered by riots in years past.
The sixth national Race in 21st Century America conference, launches today with a keynote address by former U.S. Surgeon General M. Joycelyn Elders at 1 p.m. in the Kellogg Center auditorium.
The Academic Year Task Force drafted an initial report on its findings regarding changes to the academic calendar to begin as early as 2010. Based on survey data from faculty and students and calendars of other universities, the task force suggests MSU adopt a 14-week fall semester, to begin after Labor Day. There would be a one-week finals period, according to the report.
Steve Sharra might have many lectures to come, but he is working on one as if it were his last. Sharra is an MSU visiting assistant professor in philosophy and peace and justice studies.
Paul O’Connor bought his grandma’s cutting board from a Michigan Department of Treasury auction Tuesday morning of the remnants of Flats Grille, the business he used to own. The sentimental piece and his computer from the restaurant’s office were the only things the owner of the former eatery was able to keep of items sold in the auction.
Capital Area Michigan Works! will hold a spring job expo from 2:30-6 p.m. today at the Lansing Center, 333 E. Michigan Ave. The event will give job seekers an opportunity to network with more than 50 local companies in a variety of industries, including information technology, health care, finance and manufacturing.
A public auction will be held at 10 a.m. today at Flats Grille, 551 E. Grand River Ave., for assets within the restaurant. The restaurant closed Feb. 24 when it was seized by Michigan Department of Treasury due to a tax warrant issued by the department against the State Pizza Corp., the parent company of Flats. Officials have said Flats owed more than $8,800 in unpaid taxes.
More than 100 Consumers Energy customers in East Lansing lost power Monday after winter storms blanketed the state.
Concerns about the unstable housing market have resulted in a request for East Lansing City Council to table an ordinance that would assist property owners whose homes are on the market.