Samantha Grigg, 18, pleads guilty to manslaughter in death of MSU student Dustyn Frolka
Samantha Grigg, an 18-year-old Saline resident, pleaded guilty to manslaughter and unarmed robbery Monday in Clinton County Circuit Court in St. Johns.
Samantha Grigg, an 18-year-old Saline resident, pleaded guilty to manslaughter and unarmed robbery Monday in Clinton County Circuit Court in St. Johns.
A Rose Bowl victory. A visit from the President of the United States. The devastating loss of two MSU students and an 8-year-old girl who touched the hearts of the Spartan community.As students cram for finals and prepare to depart MSU — either permanently or just for the summer — let’s reflect on the most important stories of the year.
ASMSU, MSU’s undergraduate student government culminated the 2013-2014 academic year by holding its final general assembly meeting on Thursday.
Students and alumni alike often carry the memory of hearing the Spartan Marching Band practicing in a field close to Demonstration Hall on a fall weekend.
For horticulture senior Karri Tomich-Baylis, making tea is a passion and a “guilty pleasure.” For her, the Bailey’s Blend should be “a story to the consumer, not just a tea. A tea that was grown by students and processed by students.”
About 540 non-tenure track faculty members are bargaining with administrators for better pay, job security and academic freedom.
The MSU Board of Trustees appointed Steve Hanson as the new dean of International Studies and Programs, or ISP, on Tuesday.
The Park District project could be seeing changes in size and economic scope, according to city officials and DTN Management Co.
LANSING- A Senate committee approved a higher education budget bill that, if signed into law, would cap tuition rises and increase state funding to MSU by 5.9 percent.
The MSU Salsa Club said their final farewell to their senior dancers on Wednesday night during their Senior Night Celebration which included food, drinks, awards and dancing.
Margaret Crocco, a former dean at the University of Iowa who resigned after being deemed by her staff to be an unfit leader, was appointed as a tenured MSU professor on Tuesday.
ASMSU survived a rocky academic year, which surrounded the undergraduate student government with controversy.
Miracles do happen. Just ask Brett Kast, one of the founders of the Jenna Kast Believe in Miracles Foundation.
Seniors and other guests were invited to climb all the way to the top of Beaumont Tower before the senior class bids MSU farewell.
With finals around the corner, many students might find themselves overwhelmed with stress.
lthough most students apply what they have learned in lectures by writing term papers and filling out multiple-choice exams, some students display their knowledge out in the field with dirt-caked hands.For those studying at the MSU Student Organic Farm, the coursework is dictated by each growing season, and failing an assignment means less food on the table.
On Wednesday, the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee is expected to vote on a higher education funding recommendation that could increase MSU’s funding by 6.1 percent, but also fine the university $500,000 for its involvement with union-building workshops.
The Academic Freedoms Report drafted by ASMSU, MSU’s undergraduate student government, stirred up some controversy at the University Council meeting on Tuesday.
The U.S. Supreme Court upheld Michigan’s affirmative action ban, preventing MSU and the state’s 14 ?other public universities from using race as a factor in their admissions processes.