San Diego Union-Tribune

MICHIGAN STATE SET TO RESUME CLASSES AFTER FATAL SHOOTINGS

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Michigan State University professor Marco Diaz-Munoz is still haunted by what he witnessed last Monday night, when a gunman entered his classroom in Berkey Hall, killing two of his students in what he describes as “12 minutes of terror.”

“Those images haunt me. The images of those two girls,” Diaz-Munoz told The Associated Press.

Arielle Anderson and Alexandria Verner, both juniors, would die that night, Feb. 13. The gunman would shoot six more students during the rampage in two campus buildings. Brian Fraser also would die. Five others would suffer critical gunshot wounds.

Classes are resuming today at the 50,000-student university, though Berkey Hall, an academic building, will not reopen. Officials said Sunday that swiftly resuming classes makes sense for the 2 1⁄2-month balance of the spring term.

“Coming back together is something that will help us,” said Thomas Jeitschko, executive vice president for academic affairs, adding that faculty will have extensive flexibilit­y in how they run their courses.

“We know that everybody heals at their own pace and in their own manner. Getting it exactly right will not be possible,” Jeitschko said at a news conference Sunday. “Coming back into spaces that are familiar, interactin­g with people who are familiar, is helpful in the process of healing and grieving.”

Diaz-Munoz said the university had offered to have another professor teach through the end of the semester.

“On one hand, I want to forget it all. But then on the other hand, I think I need to help my students pick up the pieces,” Diaz-Munoz said. “I think I need to help my students build a sense of meaning. It’s not going to be the same as before, but there has to be something good out of it.”

Some in the community, however, aren’t ready. The editorial board of The State News, the student newspaper, wrote Thursday that they wouldn’t immediatel­y attend classes, saying more time was needed to heal.

Jo Kovach, president of student government, said “students are scared” and will need “flexibilit­y, empathy and options” from their professors.

Following the shooting, parents arrived from all over the state to take students home, at least for the rest of last week. A petition demanding hybrid or online options for students received more than 20,000 signatures by Saturday.

Jeitschko said students will have weeks to decide whether to take a regular grade or a credit/no credit option, which would not affect their overall grade-point average.

“Let the semester play out. Come back. Try to heal,” he said.

Diaz-Munoz understand­s that some students won’t be ready to return, saying that some will still have “the fear of looking over their shoulder and looking out the window, at the doors.”

Diaz-Munoz says he has taken prescripti­on medication as a way to force himself to sleep, only emerging from his room “for a bowl of soup.”

“There are some kids in my class that are graduating this semester. And they need this horrific nightmare to have a better ending than the way it ended on Monday,” DiazMunoz said.

Sparrow Hospital said three wounded students remained in critical condition Sunday while one was upgraded to fair and another was listed in serious but stable condition. Interim university President Teresa Woodruff said Michigan State would cover funeral costs and hospital expenses.

Dozens of people have died in mass shootings so far in 2023. In 2022, there were more than 600 mass shootings in the U.S. in which at least four people were killed or injured, according to the Gun Violence Archive.

 ?? PAUL SANCYA AP ?? Mourners sit at The Rock on the grounds of Michigan State University in East Lansing, Mich., on Wednesday, two days after a gunman killed students Alexandria Verner, Brian Fraser and Arielle Anderson.
PAUL SANCYA AP Mourners sit at The Rock on the grounds of Michigan State University in East Lansing, Mich., on Wednesday, two days after a gunman killed students Alexandria Verner, Brian Fraser and Arielle Anderson.

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