More than day off
How did you spend Martin Luther King Jr. Day? Did you watch television? Sleep in? Go to a movie?
How did you spend Martin Luther King Jr. Day? Did you watch television? Sleep in? Go to a movie?
Although I agree with East Lansing police Chief Tom Wibert's warning to MSU students, "Student kidnapping should be warning" (SN 1/12), I find his comments are potentially damaging to the defense of the suspect. As I understand U.S.
Having not attended the Dec. 8 ASMSU and RHA meeting, I can't comment on the process that was used to adopt a position on the anti-affirmative action, Michigan Civil Rights Initiative, or MCRI. What I can say is procedural concerns aside our undergraduate student government adopted the right position for MSU and for Michigan. The MCRI is a misleading and divisive ballot measure being thrust on the people of the Great Lakes state by California businessman Ward Connerly.
This coming Monday represents a unique opportunity for all Americans to remember a man whose dreams of change and promise provoked a cry for justice throughout our nation and forever altered the destiny of our great country.
Almost two years ago, the news that human stem cells had been cloned sent reverberations around the world.
Society is changing. We are constantly figuring out new ways to connect to one another and share information. The new Sidekick II from T-Mobile allows users to text message even more quickly.
For all the ladies who have an issue with the Xbox, "The competition" (SN 1/10), or the Halo games, I have a suggestion.
For years, cognates, or specialties, have given students the opportunity to explore topics outside of their college. English majors have the chance to explore some seemingly unrelated classes in of crop and soil sciences.
Last week, a 21-year-old MSU student was kidnapped. It was nearly 2 a.m. She had been walking with a group of friends but split off from them to walk the last few blocks on Charles Street alone.
I would like to compliment John Bice on an insightful and clever column ("Religious dogma masked as fun, lighthearted holiday traditions" SN 01/10). In his limited space he manages to quickly demonstrate that many religions assimilate stories from peoples they conquered or that migrated into their culture, shifting them ever so slightly to better fit the current trends in spiritual values. And as Bice suggests, religions both past and present tend to use myths and fairy tales which all have very common themes that address major concerns in human history. Our terror when confronted with our own mortality has led to endless repetitions of some version of eternal life in religious folklore.
I never could quite understand what the big deal was with Stanley "Tookie" Williams. However, he had many big name stars behind him fighting for his life literally. Jamie Foxx and Snoop Dog were only a couple of big names behind him, and many of the other celebrities fighting for him were also black.
I'm a little confused when I see The State News flooded by the same false information repeated by four different people many of which a simple Facebook search will show are all white males engaged in some way with the group Young Americans for Freedom, or YAF. It's an organization that is ultra-conservative and has repeatedly expressed racist views.
When people hear about MSU, a few instant characteristics come to mind. Namely sports and agriculture. For that reason, it seems fitting that out of the more than $2 million in grants MSU received due to outstanding research, a large part will go toward the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources. The agriculture college has expanded to create all different kinds of agriculture including sustainable agriculture, which will receive $384,000 of the granted money.
As I opened up The State News on Jan. 9, I was very disappointed in what I saw on the front page. Hoping to see an article about the women's basketball team's exciting victory over Rutgers on Saturday as the headline, I was frustrated to see the page dominated by an article about the men's disappointing losses to Wisconsin and Illinois.
When Virg Bernero became mayor of Lansing, he took a step up from his prior position in the Senate. He became the mayor of Michigan's capital city. But when he left his seat in the Senate, he left an opening that will be costly to fill. With Bernero moving, his seat is open for another candidate.
Let's be honest East Lansing and MSU had some ups and downs in 2005. There was the disturbance/riot/student behavior problem/police-using-too-much-force "incident" in April. There was a City Council election and elections for student representatives that no students showed up for. But it's 2006.
Hunting. Sex. Animal. Women. It's a crazy analogy, I know, but stay with me here. Three MSU sociology professors used this ridiculous comparison in regard to a fictionalized video called "Hunting for Bambi" released in 2003.
The battle over affirmative action in Michigan and MSU has been controversial from the very beginning. In the past couple of years, speeches from affirmative action opponents and supporters at MSU have led to arguments, heated discussions and calls to the police. Much of this drama has been centered around the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative, a ballot proposal that would "ban public institutions from using affirmative action programs that give preferential treatment to groups or individuals based on their race, gender, color, ethnicity or national origin for public employment, education or contracting purposes." The supporters of the initiative gathered enough signatures and submitted them to the Secretary of State, which is the way ballot proposals make it to the voters. But the proposal has been stymied by accusations that the wording is misleading and causes people to think it would do something other than what it does. The Board of State Canvassers has repeatedly refused to certify the signatures, despite an order from the Michigan Court of Appeals that the initiative get placed on the ballot. The board is composed of two Republicans, who, at their last meeting on the issue, voted to certify the petition, while one Democrat voted against it and the other abstained. The meeting became heated and a table was almost overturned in the debate. Affirmative action debates have become a circus in Michigan betraying the fact that it is such a serious issue that could have long-lasting implications. Accusations that voters were misled is something people should think about when voting in November.
On Dec. 8, ASMSU, the MSU undergraduate student government, did the most atrocious possible act that Spartans should find repulsive. ASMSU did not have the issue of the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative, or MCRI, on their agenda; however, it was abruptly put to vote by the council. The MCRI will be on the ballot in the next election and will ban affirmative action if it is passed. Our student council voted on the issue and ended up condemning it.
As a representative of the College of Arts and Letters in ASMSU, MSU's undergraduate student government, I would like to say how dismayed I am at the ridiculous ASMSU and RHA meeting on Dec.