Any student who misses a semester or two due to illness no longer has to file a readmission application, according to a new policy approved in January.
Hello again; and though it is a little late, welcome to spring term 1997. For those of you who have been following this series of articles, you already know that I had been out of school last term due to surgery I had on my hip in September.
No matter how many times the University reconstructs buildings and parking lots, the number of available on-campus parking seems to continually decrease.
Is there a bone you have to pick with the University? Do you find the city of East Lansing to be ignorant to your needs? What do you think of the State?
MSU's Office of Study Abroad (OSA) offers more than 50 programs this summer that will help you discover other cultures, enhance your resume, improve your language skills and broaden your experience.
Although it has been used \less than a dozen times" by university students or others, the MSU Union has had a TTY available for use on a check-out basis for nearly a decade, said James Sheppard, Union manager."
To see the pair traveling down a corridor, teamwork seemingly effortless, you'd never know they only met three and a half months ago. In October, master's student Erica Stark made an addition to her family.
Hello again. I would first like to wish all of you a happy new year and express my hopes that you had enjoyable holidays. Second, I would like to start up where I left off in the last issue.
Another new year. Another new semester. Another new chance to effect change in one's life. Hard as it may seem, we all could do with a little change in our lives.
Bob Williams, Commissioner of Administration on Developmental Disabilities, will speak at a colloquium sponsored by the Office of Programs for Handicapper Students and the All-University Diversity Committee.
A bill introduced by Rep. Laura Baird (D-Okemos) into the Michigan House would amend the wheelchair \lemon" law that was introduced and passed in 1991."
For four years, Michigan's commitment to handicappers has been demonstrated through TECH 2000, a multifaceted assistive technology project funded by a federal grant.