Bad break
Although the Catholic Diocese of Lansing had every legal right to close the curtain on the Lansing Civic Players, its decision to do so was immoral. Censorship by any institution - public or private - is an injustice. On Dec.
Although the Catholic Diocese of Lansing had every legal right to close the curtain on the Lansing Civic Players, its decision to do so was immoral. Censorship by any institution - public or private - is an injustice. On Dec.
The recent tuition hike approved by the Central Michigan University Board of Trustees is unreasonable and despicable. In December, the Central Michigan board voted to raise the schools undergraduate tuition rate by 28 percent beginning in fall 2002 - which will cost full-time in-state students $498 more per semester on average.
American citizens are Constitutionally protected from double jeopardy - being tried twice for the same crime.
If theres one lesson President Bush should have learned from his fathers presidency, its not to make promises you may not be able to keep. At a California rally on Saturday, Bush vowed he wouldnt allow his 10-year, $1.35 trillion tax reduction plan to be reduced, shouting, Not over my dead body will they raise your taxes to the crowd.
It seems like yesterday that university officials were leery about paying the bill for the Spartan Marching Bands trip to the Silicon Valley Football Classic in San Jose, Calif.
As 2001 comes to a close, The State News takes a look back at the facts and figures that made the year so memorable.
Members of the Task Force on Student-Police Relations have come a long way since September, but student concerns arent resolved yet.The three subgroups of the task force released preliminary findings and recommendations Tuesday, setting the stage for final recommendations at the next meeting Jan.
FOR SALE: Slightly unprestigious New Years Eve bowl game in Silicon Valley seeks sexy opponent with at least six wins to face Fresno State in front of 30,000 computer geeks.
It is preposterous that the possibility exists to send the MSU football team to a bowl game without the 300-member Spartan Marching Band.
Cool heads must prevail while a contract for the Graduate Employees Union is ironed out. While tensions mount and tempers flare at the Graduate Employees Organization of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, officials turn a wary eye to our union, hoping to prevent the worst. The 8-year-old Illinois organization voted to hold a two-day strike to protest the university denying members the right to unionize. The situation is different at MSU, where union members are focused on several issues for the unions first contract, including quality heath care, a living wage, a fair workload, full tuition waivers, improved training and job security. While negotiations have continued steadily, the occasional spark of irritability shows up in the form of rallies or arguments, and the possibility of a strike, however remote, only further demonstrates the need for calm thinking. Not all graduate employees even support the actions being taken by the union.
Beginning next summer, MSUs Office of Study Abroad will send students and faculty to a country where most Americans havent been - Cuba. After acquiring a two-year license a few weeks ago, the university will be able to send participants to Cubas capital, Havana, and take part in Caribbean Regional Development: The Cuban Experience. Students and faculty traveling to Cuba will be able to experience many unique aspects of the country such as traveling throughout the island and seeing historic landmarks firsthand. In addition to benefiting members of the MSU community, landing Cuba in the study abroad program also opens relations between Cuba and the United States. Cuba has had a long and often rocky relationship between our government with its communist dictatorship, led by Fidel Castro.
Congratulations to the MSU football team for clinching its bowl eligibility and giving the seniors one last game to play as Spartans.
Michigans 2-year-old Life Sciences Corridor seemed to have all the potential of making the state the Silicon Valley for life-benefiting research.
Nov. 20s resignation of ASMSUs Academic Assembly representative for the College of Communication Arts and Sciences left more questions than answers.Monica Leslies departure from the assembly leaves one less hardworking member to represent MSU students.
The budget cuts caused by the $500 million shortfall in the state budget hurt many beneficial programs, including 19 health care clinics around the state that lost about 75 percent of their funding - a sacrifice that should not have been made.These clinics, which include 14 on school grounds, supply health care to already underserved areas.A 200-person rally outside the state Capitol on Wednesday had parents, students and legislators demanding Gov.
The university could do students a great service by pushing back the due date for tuition bills.A month before classes begin for the spring semester, students have already received their tuition bills and are expected to pay up, one of the earliest billing cycles in the Big Ten.At other schools such as The Ohio State University or Purdue University, students are not expected to pay until about Jan.
The U.S. Supreme Court should cast aside Congress latest attempt to prohibit the posting of explicit material on the Internet as an ineffectual attempt to perform a task that should belong to parents.Justice Department attorneys argue its futile to try and keep children off of particular sites on the Internet, with Web navigation as easy or easier than changing the channel on a television.The court is expected to rule next year on whether Congress overstepped the Constitution with a 1998 law meant to curb childrens access to Internet pornography.But just like the protections in place to keep children from accessing pornography on cable TV or to block out particular programming, parents do have access to software to help police their childs time on the Internet.The use of Internet filters by parents, schools and libraries is a more effective way to keep kids from accessing porn sites - and protects First Amendment rights online.Protecting children from illicit material should be, above all, a parenting issue.
He may be best known for his bombastic style and famous clients, but attorney Geoffrey Fieger proved he has a caring side, too.Tuesday, the MSU-Detroit College of Law announced Fieger, a 1979 DCL graduate, is donating $4 million to give the school the nations first trial practice institute for law students.Participants in the Geoffrey Fieger Trial Practice Institute will have the opportunity to gain experiences through high-tech trial courtrooms, clinics and simulations.The institute is a two-year program designed in collaboration with practicing trial lawyers and judges, giving law students special real-world experience and other lessons to help them be more successful in the courtroom.Fiegers donation will also help support an annual lecture series that showcases nationally known trial lawyers.
Kudos to MSU President M. Peter McPherson for his involvement in the call for border security talks between the United States and Canada. A letter signed by 21 U.S.
The fear of getting in trouble for a minor in possession of alcohol infraction is outweighing too many students concern for their safety - a dangerous trend that current enforcement policies encourage. Cracking down on underage drinking does not teach responsibility, it only causes students to fear for their legal well-being.