Lansing AIDS Walk nets more than $12,000
More than 40 members of the MSU Evans Scholars gathered in Valley Court Park on Sunday morning, gearing up to walk more than three miles around the city to support the AIDS Walk Lansing/East Lansing.
More than 40 members of the MSU Evans Scholars gathered in Valley Court Park on Sunday morning, gearing up to walk more than three miles around the city to support the AIDS Walk Lansing/East Lansing.
A bus-tracking mobile phone application is on the horizon for MSU students as ASMSU representatives passed a bill Thursday night to begin discussions on how to develop the program.
Covered in charcoal and paint, studio art senior Jane Sasso worked on her artwork among dozens of other artists sketching on the collaborative art boards strewn across the Kresge Art Center front lawn on Thursday afternoon for the MSU Department of Art and Art History Drawing Marathon.
A newly redesigned energy-themed lobby in Wilson Hall will give engineering students a chance to learn about real-world issues and work with Consumers Energy employees.
In a 15-foot-long tank holding 6,000 gallons of water in the basement of the Engineering Building, a group of robotic fish swin in sync to help the enviroment thanks to a team of MSU researchers and students.
A reported break-in at Chandler Crossings yesterday is the sixth since the beginning of August, and although police say there’s no evidence connecting them, the alleged thefts are targeting students’ technology equipment.
Everyday, East Lansing Police Department Officer Erich Vedder and his partner patrol the streets of East Lansing, but Vedder’s partner is not the kind you would expect.
MSU students now can get discounts at their fingertips as a popular coupon company has launched a downloadable mobile application for more convenient local shopping.
It’s rude to call someone a name. It’s easy to type it.
After a long wait, students and East Lansing residents will have the chance to see author Jonathan Safran Foer in person.
East Lansing and Lansing have the state’s cheapest gas, according to the AAA surveys in its Fuel Gauge Report.
As members of the MSU and Greater Lansing community came together to commemorate the 2011 International Day of Peace, speakers emphasized the value in embracing the area’s diversity.
Tjardo, a military dog, was deployed overseas in the war against terror. He fought and trained alongside fellow soldiers and then was wounded alongside them. Assigned to the 75th Ranger Regiment, Tjardo, or TJ, was sent back to fight after recovering. But when the canine suffered his second injury, the IRONDOG fund at MSU’s College of Veterinary Medicine came in to help.
After hearing about a shortage of bodies in an MSU anatomy class about 20 years ago, Edith Barnes decided she wanted to donate her body to science.
Political theory senior Nina Patchak said she has become disappointed with a lack of student involvement on campus about the current Israel-Palestine debate brewing in the United Nations.
For Dewitt, Mich., resident Angie Anderson, opening a local cafe and catering business has been a long-time goal.
Two new surveys released Wednesday show a significant number of college and recent graduate-aged young adults have gained insurance from the Affordable Care Act, popularized by some as “Obamacare,” in the face of the country’s economic struggles.
Some students in the College of Communication Arts and Sciences could have the opportunity to get more hands-on experience with multimedia in their courses this fall with the advent of a new integrated media arts program, which launched this September.
The Council of Graduate Students, or COGS, held its first full council meeting of the year Wednesday night in the Law College Castle Boardroom Room 343 to discuss proposed renovations to Chittenden Hall and cuts to federal loans to graduate students.
Despite the rough economy, East Lansing might be seeing job opportunities and growth with the help of an almost $1 million grant from the federal government.