MSU receives grant to work on reducing nitrogen pollution
A team composed of MSU’s professors and scientists will start working on a project to find ways that could help reduce farm pollution starting in July.
A team composed of MSU’s professors and scientists will start working on a project to find ways that could help reduce farm pollution starting in July.
After more than 100 years of history, Morrill Hall has reached the beginning of the end.
“Mother knows best,” is an old adage that many are familiar with. However, a recent study indicates many Medicaid-insured mothers-to-be are not being exposed to a service that could help them receive the best care possible for themselves and their infants.
Michigan’s economy has made improvements in the last few years, and graduates from the many Michigan public universities are taking notice.
When construction management senior Jason Korth looks outside his window, he sees crowds of protesters.
The MSU Bakers are working hard to establish a more visible presence on campus, leading to the opening of a farm stand where they sell their fresh baked goods.
The moment she walked out the door of REACH Studio Art Center for the first time, Residential College in the Arts and Humanities senior Emily Nott knew she had to be a part of it, which has now led her to recognition in the community.
If a student is living in East Lansing throughout the summer and don’t have their own mode of transportation, chances are they have to deal with the lowered frequency of the Capital Area Transportation Authority, or CATA, buses to get around.
With the advent of the digital age, students no longer have to rely solely on word of mouth to find information on professors, electing instead to peruse the Internet in search of pertinent information.
Jill Gulick has loved pigs since she started raising them for fairs as a child. This passion for pork led the animal science junior straight to the pursuit of a career in swine genetics in addition to a role on MSU’s Meat Judging Team.
Months of hard work, glue gun scars and after-school practices came to fruition for students across the globe at the 34th annual Odyssey of the Mind World Finals, held at MSU’s campus May 22-25.
While MSU is constantly making changes to cafeterias and menus, one thing won’t need to be changed, the food truck’s cheeseburgers.
That bright trio you saw in the sky this weekend were not stars.
MSU students have been working together to design a much-anticipated app called TempoRun, which improves an individual’s running ability through music.
It started off with three friends. Throughout the spring semester, former Marine Logan Stark and MSU alumnae Lexi Dakin and Rebecca Zantjer worked diligently on their documentary project, editing video into the early morning, eating pizza rolls and enjoying one another’s company.
Whether tossing a baseball, flipping through multiplication tables on note cards or plucking cords on a guitar, conventional logic dictates that practice makes perfect, however, new research reveals that there is far more to becoming proficient than simple repetition.
Even though students go home in the summer, operations at MSU continue to run around the clock in an effort to spread out costs more evenly.
The Superior Institute of Medicine, or ISMD, and MSU held a miniworkshop on Wednesday in the Biomedical and Physical Sciences Building with more than 150 doctors in attendance with hopes of learning about osteopathic medicine and the health care system in the U.S.
Since graduating from MSU in 1989, MSU alumna Sheryl Connelly has worn many hats. With experience in everything from sales to law, Connelly currently serves as the futurist for Ford Motor Co., predicting trends to help the company adapt to future changes in society.
After a decision was made in April by the university to withhold summer student tax dollars collected for ASMSU, university officials have threatened to cut the organization’s funds for the 2013-14 academic year as well.