New exhibition opens at MSU Museum
On Sunday, the MSU Museum opened a new exhibition titled “On Death and Horses and Other People” in the Heritage Gallery.
On Sunday, the MSU Museum opened a new exhibition titled “On Death and Horses and Other People” in the Heritage Gallery.
Although telemarketers usually face answering machines, harsh words and being abruptly hung up on, about 250 student callers at MSU Greenline continue to work to raise funds for MSU.
Upon graduation, many interior design students at MSU and other universities across the state plan to pack their bags and head elsewhere for work unless a new bill is passed by the state legislature to give them credibility for going to college.
MSU Safe Place currently is holding an online auction to raise funds to support domestic violence and stalking survivors in the MSU and Lansing area. The MSU Safe Place Holiday Online Auction will end Dec. 2 at noon.
MSU has helped Michigan become one of the largest wine-producing states in the country, and now, students and researchers are working to bring the quality of Michigan wines to the next caliber.
ASMSU granted numerous campus student groups additional funding this semester for events and competitions to strengthen MSU’s campus and community outreach.
The College of Human Medicine, or CHM, will formally welcome three new departments starting Jan. 1, 2012, after the Board of Trustees voted to authorize their creation at its Friday meeting.
The University of Nebraska’s addition to the Big Ten has had many effects on MSU— there’s a new flag on Spartan Stadium, a new athletic rival and now a new ice cream flavor at the Dairy Store.
During his time in East Lansing, MSU alumnus Gregory Charvat began tinkering with a device that had superhuman powers — the ability to “see” through concrete walls.
When Ishmael Khaldi worked as the first Bedouin Deputy Consul of Israel in San Francisco, he was surprised how few people were aware of his country and the issues it was facing.
As James H. Cone stood at the podium giving a lecture on the role of religion in the black experience, the lectern could have doubled for a pulpit and Cone as a preacher as he spoke to a crowd that often responded with an enthusiastic “amen.”
Dressed in a Spartan cheerleader outfit, 8-year-old Irene Nielsen walked in front of her father’s horse-drawn chariot at the MSU Homecoming parade, ruffling her pom-poms.
With bells on their ankles and red paint on their fingertips, a group of classical Indian dancers took the stage Friday night in the College of Law for a performance during Indian Night Diwali celebrations.
Four members of the MSU Crew Club hacked, dug and pulled away weeds in an overgrown part of East Lansing resident Linda Shankland’s backyard Sunday afternoon to raise money for their team.
MSU’s master plan for campus dining now is one step closer to completion after the Board of Trustees approved an authorization to proceed with a $13.95 million renovation to Shaw Hall’s cafeteria at its Friday meeting.
On Friday, the newly unveiled Culinary Business Learning Lab looked more like something from Food Network than a classroom.
When Brittany Fox graduated from MSU in 2009, she boarded a plane to Bangkok dreaming to work to benefit women in poverty.
A bus-tracking mobile app idea proposed by ASMSU officials last month is expanding into an app providing many campus services to students at the tip of their fingers.
An archaeological dig on campus, which took place this summer, revealed that students today might not be that different from MSU students 100 years ago.