MSU Events Calendar |
All day | Dear Mr. Mandela, Dear Mrs. Parks: Children's Letters, Global Lessons Exhibits (Museum, Gardens, ...) (MSU Museum - Main Gallery) Michigan State University and the MSU Museum, in partnership with the Nelson Mandela Museum and the Keeper of the Word Foundation, helped ci... |
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Exploring Haiti and the 2010 Earthquake Exhibits (Museum, Gardens, ...) (3 West, Main Library) An Exhibit from MSU Libraries: Exploring Haiti and the 2010 Earthquake offers an introduction to the history and culture of Haiti, the earth... |
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Unpacking Collections: The Legacy of Cuesta Benberry, An African American Quilt Scholar Exhibits (Museum, Gardens, ...) (MSU Museum - Heritage Gallery) This exhibition is an attempt to understand the work of Cuesta Benberry, one of America's important collector/scholars, through interacting ... |
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"Avelution" Birds in the Development of Darwin's Theory of Evolution Exhibits (Museum, Gardens, ...) (MSU Museum - West Gallery) Naturalist Charles Darwin was strongly influenced by avian examples while he was developing the Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection. Bi... |
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2:30pm | The Little Star That Could Public Programs (Abrams Planetarium) Little Star is sad because he has no planets of his own, so he sets out on a quest to find some. Along the way he encounters an assortment ... |
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2:30pm | Vietnamese New Year Celebration Special Events (Multipurpose Room, Spartan Village Community. 1460 Middlevale Road, East Lansing. ) The Association of Vietnamese Scholars and Students (AVSS) at MSU invites you to celebrate The Vietnamese Lunar New Year! |
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3:00pm | Concert Band and Chamber Winds Performing Arts (Dance, Music, Theatre, ...) (Cobb Great Hall, Wharton Center, Shaw Lane at Bogue Street, East Lansing, MI) |
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3:00pm | Melanie Helton, soprano, and Alan Nathan, piano Performing Arts (Dance, Music, Theatre, ...) (Music Building Auditorium) Link to bio: Melanie Helton | ||||
4:00pm | Two Small Pieces of Glass Public Programs (Abrams Planetarium) Four hundred years ago, Galileo was the first astronomer to use a simple telescope to look into space, revealing an infinite and perplexing ... |
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