Saturday, April 20, 2024

Inauguration

NEWS
As of noon Tuesday, the nation is in Barack Obama’s hands. In front of a crowd estimated to exceed one million people, Obama assumed the presidency from George W. Bush and became the first African American president in U.S. history.

Latest stories

NEWS

Obama sworn in as new president

Washington — It’s official: Barack Obama is the 44th president of the United States. Obama told a crowd of more than a million that stretched from the inaugural platform at the U.S. Capitol to the Lincoln Memorial in the distance that the nation must choose “hope over fear, unity of purpose over conflict and discord” to overcome the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.

NEWS

MSU alum to bartend during inauguration

While most people in Washington, D.C., will be fighting off other spectators at the National Mall today, 2006 MSU alumnus David Thurow will be trying to tame a different kind of crowd — the one expected to gather at the bar where he works.

NEWS

Mich. appeals to Obama

For Mike Green, driving to Washington, D.C., to take part in the week’s inauguration activities was well worth the 10-plus hour car ride. That’s because Green, president of Lansing’s United Auto Workers Local 652, has more at stake than simply ushering in a new president this inauguration.

NEWS

Debate team argues Obama's environmental plans

Members of the MSU Debate Team took a more active role in inauguration activities when they debated President-elect Barack Obama’s energy and environmental plans. The debate, held Monday morning at Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, pitted MSU against Wake Forest University.

NEWS

Inauguration on campus

For those of you stuck in East Lansing for President-elect Barack Obama’s inauguration, don’t fret. There are still a number of ways to celebrate the event here at MSU.

NEWS

Inauguration crowds inundate D.C.

Washington, D.C. — The jam-packed crowds on the metro, the confused looks in the streets and the hundreds of port-a-potties around Capitol Hill were signs that by Sunday, many of the Inauguration enthusiasts had arrived in Washington, D.C.

NEWS

Inauguration kickoff ceremony draws hundreds of thousands

Washington, D.C. — Shoulder-to-shoulder crowds and bumper-to-bumper traffic couldn’t keep hundreds of thousands of political junkies away from Washington, D.C., Sunday for the kickoff of Inauguration Week. Pre-celebration estimates were that about 750,000 people would crowd into the area surrounding the Lincoln Memorial to watch the official Opening Ceremony, which was an entertaining mixture of celebrity guest appearances, uplifting speeches and performances of patriotic tunes.

NEWS

Washington bound

When the Rev. Michael Murphy travels to Washington, D.C., for the inauguration, he won’t just be celebrating. He will be preparing for a new job.

COMMENTARY

Invocation choice reflects bipartisan reach

President-elect Barack Obama will become this nation’s first minority president Tuesday. But not everybody’s voice is being heard, and it’s time for that to change. It’s time to truly become a nation of one.

NEWS

Drafting a plan

The inauguration of President-elect Barack Obama is seven days away, and MSU students — along with millions of others from across the nation — are planning trips to Washington, D.C., to witness the event. Below is a list of items students should keep in mind if they’re heading to the nation’s capital.

NEWS

Students trek to inauguration

The moment international relations sophomore Brad Parker learned President-elect Barack Obama won, he knew he and his friends would be in Washington, D.C., for the inauguration Jan. 20.