On election day, 1948,
The State News, going to press at 7 a.m., became the only morning daily to place Harry S. Truman in the lead for president. In June 1950, the first issue of the summer edition of
The State News carried an editorial critical of the Michigan Department of the
American Legion's Boy's State program held on the Michigan State College campus. Several days later, June 25, North Korea invaded South Korea initiating the
Korean War. The following Monday the state American Legion held its summer encampment and adopted a resolution calling for the suspension of
The State News and the expelling of its student editor, Ron M. Linton. Later that week, Michigan State suspended further summer publication of the paper but declined to expel its editor. The school did, however, announce the appointment of a full-time college employee, William McIlrath, as director of the publication with authority over the paper's content. It was later learned that the school had already planned this action but used this incident as a rationale. This culminated a period of six years—since the end of World War II—of increasing irritation of the school's administration by the independent attitude of the student journalists. Returning veterans were a significant portion of the paper's staff and, being several years older than students enrolled directly from high school and matured by war, they tended to exercise a more critical attitude toward campus events. This led to a series of articles and editorials about the difficulty had by African-American male students in getting haircuts, including the refusal of the Union's barber shop to service African-Americans. It also published a series critical of the school's plan to require male cooperative residences to hire "house mothers"; ultimately, the coops were exempted, but fraternities were not.
The State News, to the administration's consternation, exposed the administration's efforts to block unionization of dining room and school service employees. When the local Congressman demanded in 1950 that Michigan State remove left-leaning economist
Paul Douglas (later U.S. Senator from Illinois) from its lecture series, the paper fought back in a series of editorials that resulted in the Congressman turning tail.
The State News was the first U.S. daily newspaper, commercial or student, to editorially criticize then-U.S. Senator
Joseph McCarthy (R-WI) for his sweeping charges without proof of communist activities by a number of citizens. In November 1965, four
State News editors resigned over the faculty adviser's and the lead editor's decision to spike a story involving Paul Schiff, who claimed he was denied re-admission to MSU for his political views. Internal controversies include a group of junior editors dissatisfied with the editor-in-chief starting a weekly newspaper,
Campus Observer, in 1968. The following year, the managing editor took over the editorial reins in response to staff grumbling. In April 1977, a one-day newsroom staff walkout followed the board's appointment of the next top editor when the staff's recommendation was not picked. In 2000,
The State News published the alternative comic strip
Fetus-X by artists
Eric Millikin and
Casey Sorrow. After protests from the
Catholic League, and then MSU president
M. Peter McPherson declaring he wanted the artists banned,
The State News fired artists Eric Millikin and Casey Sorrow. In 2003, an advertisement printed in the
State News showed
Palestinians celebrating in the street while
Israelis lit candles and prayed. The advertisement's caption claimed that these were the reactions to the
9/11 terrorist attacks. Pro-Palestinian groups protested outside the MSU Student Services building and demanded that their student fees be refunded. On
Veterans Day, 2005, editorial cartoonist Mike Ramsey drew a piece that showed a
World War II soldier who liberated
concentration camps conversing with a modern-day soldier who was shown holding a torture device. In response,
Young Americans for Freedom and the
College Republicans picketed the offices of
The State News and called for Ramsey's dismissal. Ramsey was not fired. In 2008, the Michigan Supreme Court heard arguments regarding
The State News' lawsuit against MSU over Freedom of Information Act issues. The State News received criticism in 2010 for replacing some of its comics with games/puzzles, including new additions of a giant crossword, Octo, Word Finder and Pathem puzzles. In 2010 the State News published
Crosswords, Pathem puzzles,
Sudoku, Octo, Wordplay and
Word Search puzzles. As of 2012 The State News continues to support publishing puzzles and games. In 2018,
The State News received national attention for an editorial demanding the resignation of MSU President Lou Anna K. Simon amid fallout from the Larry Nassar sex assault scandal. Simon quit shortly thereafter. In September 2025, the
Society of Professional Journalists Foundation awarded TSN the Eugene S. Pulliam First Amendment Award "for its investigative series “Inside the Nassar Documents,” which covers the university’s handling of the
Larry Nassar sexual abuse scandal." ==Journalistic opportunity==