Los Angeles Times

Michigan State gets back to class after shooting

The campus is quiet as many students attend virtually. Others head to nearby Capitol to demand gun reforms.

-

EAST LANSING, Mich. — Michigan State University students and faculty returned to the East Lansing campus Monday as the university resumed normal operations, one week after a gunman killed three students and injured five others.

The 50,000-student university’s campus remained relatively quiet on the first day back, with many professors allowing students to attend class virtually. Many students skipped class to attend an afternoon protest at the state Capitol in Lansing to call for gun control legislatio­n.

All students at the university this semester will be given a credit/no credit option, which allows them to receive credit for all classes without an effect on their overall grade-point average. University officials also asked teachers in an email Friday to “extend as much grace and flexibilit­y as you are able with individual students, now and in the coming weeks.”

Brogan Kelley, a freshman, left East Lansing after the shooting to return home to his family in western Michigan. But he drove back on Sunday so that he could attend class in person. He said that he thought it was important “to go back about my life.”

“For me, not going to class felt like I would have been letting the shooter win. I didn’t want this one tragedy to define the place I call home and the university that’s giving me my education,” Kelley said.

Kelley, who was at an offcampus house when the shooting took place, said the majority of his professors had given students the option to attend class in person or online, with many students choosing the latter.

The shootings at Michigan State happened Feb. 13 during evening classes at Berkey Hall and nearby at the MSU Union. Students across the vast campus were ordered to shelter in place for four hours — “run, hide, fight” if necessary — while police hunted for the gunman.

Anthony McRae, 43, killed himself when confronted by police not far from his home in Lansing.

Two wounded students remain in critical condition at Sparrow Hospital, university police said Monday. Two other students were in stable condition, with another student in “fair condition.”

The university has been criticized by some in the community for returning too quickly. The editorial board of the State News, the student newspaper, wrote Thursday that they wouldn’t attend class this week, either in person or online. More time was needed to heal, the students wrote.

March for Our Lives founder David Hogg, a survivor of a 2018 high school shooting in Parkland, Fla., joined hundreds of students and community members at the state Capitol for a sitdown protest Monday. Hogg and other students spoke on the Capitol steps, calling for state lawmakers to enact gun reform.

“Enough is enough. How many more students have to die until you can hear our cries?” Michigan State senior Kelsey Gruzin said.

In the days after the shooting, Michigan Democrats, who control all levels of the state government for the first time in decades, have promised to pass gunsafety measures. Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer has called for gun control legislatio­n that includes universal background checks, safe storage laws and “extreme risk protection orders.”

“It’s no secret that your governor is probably going to be running for president,” Hogg said Monday. “Are you ready to hold Gretchen Whitmer accountabl­e?”

 ?? Jake May Flint Journal ?? SUE DODDE, right, comforts a Michigan State student Monday, a week after a gunman killed three people and wounded five others. “I didn’t want this one tragedy to define the place I call home,” one freshman said.
Jake May Flint Journal SUE DODDE, right, comforts a Michigan State student Monday, a week after a gunman killed three people and wounded five others. “I didn’t want this one tragedy to define the place I call home,” one freshman said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States