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NEWS

MSU, city officials plan for Welcome Week

University officials and East Lansing police are expecting a smooth fall welcome when students return to campus at the end of the month. Instead of arriving a week before classes begin, as in previous years, this year’s MSU freshmen will have three days on campus before classes. The change was made because of concerns about student health and safety, Provost Kim Wilcox said at the Sept. 23, 2008, MSU Academic Council meeting.

NEWS

City officials might limit taxicab expansion in E.L.

The future of taxicab expansion in East Lansing might be bleak after Tuesday’s City Council meeting at City Hall, 410 Abbot Road. Before the council approved seven additional taxicab licenses, it discussed the increasing number of cabs on the road. City Clerk Nicole Evans said the number of cabs had hit the 100 mark and a report by East Lansing Police Officer Adrian Ojerio and Deputy Chief Juli Liebler found the increasing number of taxicabs was beginning to pose a problem in downtown East Lansing.

NEWS

E.L. shop opens glass blowing to public

Come September, anyone walking by OZ Gallery and Hand Blown Glass, 551 E. Grand River Ave., will have the opportunity to stop in and see glass-blown artwork in the making. The store, which recently moved from its alleyway location to the property formerly occupied by Flats Grille, will begin blowing glass in the store and will give customers a chance to put their own design on the merchandise, owner Ken Targal said.

NEWS

Sign of the times

WKAR has been providing a service called Radio Talking Book for 36 years. The service caters to those who are blind, dyslexic or can’t otherwise read for themselves.

COMMENTARY

Apartment complexes exploiting students

I am a first-year law student at this great institution. About six months ago, I began to do everything that I felt would prepare me for a successful start at the MSU College of Law. I went to an admitted candidates session where I met the new dean of the law school as well as several professors. I asked questions of both the financial aid office and the admissions office. I was even offered a full scholarship to the College of Law as part of the King’s Scholars Program.

NEWS

Sign of the times

At 8 a.m. every Saturday there is a line behind the East Lansing Fire Station No. 1, 1700 Abbot Road. Lansing residents clutching their papers browse the bicycles lining the two large red trailers until volunteers arrive to distribute them at 9 a.m. The Share-A-Bike program began in 1994 when founder Ron Sprinkel took it off the hands of Mae Tanner. Since then, the program has been providing free bicycles to members of the community who cannot afford to purchase one on their own. “Here everything is free.

COMMENTARY

Moving out leads to new beginnings

Forgive me if I seem a little sweaty writing this week’s column; it’s been a long day. I’ve been up since about 8 a.m. this morning, generally doing more organizing than actual work.

COMMENTARY

State should move to prevent poor teaching

There are a lot of strict ways a government can punish an organization. And to those who don’t know the context, those punishments often can seem unwarranted. But there are times when organizations repeatedly have ignored government wishes, which almost always means penalties will come.

NEWS

New college loan repayment program aims to help students

A new program aims to give recent college graduates a safety net if they aren’t able to pay student loans back right away. SafeStart will provide financial literacy training during college, personal debt counseling after college and loan repayment protection, said Carlo Salerno, the principal at BridgeSpan Financial LLC, SafeStart’s parent company, co-founder of SafeStart and executive vice president of external relations. “Basically, it’s private deferment, and the whole purpose of private deferment is to let you shift your student loan payment to a time when you’re better able to afford them,” Salerno said.

NEWS

Airline ticket buyers to be required to give birth date, gender

Airline passengers might help identify known and suspected terrorists by simply providing more information when booking flights. The second phase of the Transportation Security Administration, or TSA’s, Secure Flight Program will begin Aug. 15 and will require travelers to give their date of birth and gender when purchasing tickets.

NEWS

MSU professor builds online West African Muslim library

An MSU professor is creating a Web site drawing attention to some of the world’s almost 1.2 billion Muslims who live outside the Middle East. MSU professor of history David Robinson is teaming up with professors from Indiana University to build an online library about Muslims in West Africa with a $250,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

COMMENTARY

Digital textbooks not without problems

The country’s slow transition to an entirely digital world has made its way into the education system, as more universities begin to offer online courses and digital textbooks for classes. President Barack Obama proposed funding online courses at community colleges as part of an effort to improve higher education, and it appears colleges nationwide soon might no longer need paper books. But that doesn’t mean this new technology won’t have some drawbacks.

NEWS

Optimism high for MSU football season

Coming off a 9-4 season and an appearance in the Capital One Bowl, optimism for the upcoming season was high Tuesday during the MSU football team’s annual media day at Spartan Stadium. Entering his third season as head coach, Mark Dantonio said one of the biggest things his team did last year was come back from disappointment.

FOOTBALL

MSU football begins fall camp, Dantonio returns to basic skills

At the beginning of the MSU football team’s fall camp, everybody wears a name tag — even Mark Dantonio. With a “Coach Dantonio” written on tape across his stomach, Dantonio kicked off his third season as MSU head coach with the team’s first practice Monday and noted not much has changed from his first two fall camps in East Lansing.

NEWS

MSU to collaborate on sustainability program with Costa Rican university

MSU is looking to increase its ties to a sustainable university in Central America with a new graduate program. José Zaglul, president of EARTH University in Costa Rica, spoke at the International Center on Monday morning about his university’s efforts in sustainability and entrepreneurship. Gordon Guyer, who was president of MSU in 1992 and 1993, helped select 8,000 acres in the midst of the rainforest that became EARTH University.

NEWS

Federal stimulus funds youth worker program in E.L.

A new program funded by stimulus money gave young people the chance to work in East Lansing this summer. The Youth Workforce Development Program allows young people ranging from 16-24 to gain work experience with East Lansing’s Department of Public Works.

NEWS

MSU assistant professor develops teacher-training program

Teachers in the K-12 range will have the opportunity to participate in research at MSU under a program designed to refine classroom teaching methods and inspire innovative curriculum changes across the state. With the help of $500,000 in federal stimulus money from the National Science Foundation, Xiaobo Tan, an MSU assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering, has been developing the Research Experiences for Teachers in Engineering, or RET, program, with a focus on bio-inspired technology and systems. The program officially will begin training teachers by next summer, Tan said. “We’re going to have these teachers working in individual faculty members’ labs, participating in … cutting-edge research projects,” Tan said.

NEWS

Squirrel deemed culprit in local power outages

Mother nature was responsible for a power outage that caused more than 400 East Lansing residents to lose power, but not in the way one might expect. A squirrel chewing through fuses caused blackouts in the neighborhoods surrounding Trowbridge Road and Lilac Avenue near the south side of campus.

NEWS

Blue Cross funds program to address childhood obesity

MSU, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan and Grand Rapids Public Schools are hoping to make Grand Rapids children more FIT. The collective is working on a project called the FIT initiative, which is funded by a $1 million grant from Blue Cross. Tracy Thompson, director of the FIT program and outreach specialist in the MSU College of Human Medicine, said the program aims to help all children, regardless of body size. “The directive is to address childhood obesity and we’re trying to be aware of the fact that it’s not just taking those who happen to be overweight but children of all sizes,” Thompson said.