Saturday, September 15, 2007

MBJ: "MSU Enrollment Hits All-time High" = Go Bulldogs

"MSU Enrollment Hits All-time High"
Mississippi Business Journal
September 13, 2007

STARKVILLE — For the first time in its 129-year-history, Mississippi State University (MSU) is surpassing the 17,000-mark in enrollment.

The university reports a record enrollment of 17,039, including the largest-ever freshman class of 2,281 entering students, as fall 2007 classes get underway. The total includes an all-time high at the MSU-Meridian campus and a record number of graduate students, says president Robert H. "Doc" Foglesong.

Fall 2007 enrollment exceeds the previous year by more than 800 students, with more than 16,200 on the Starkville campus.

Current enrollment includes: a record number of African-Americans at 3,351; 76.8% of the student body from Mississippi; MSU-Meridian enrolling a record 821 students; and, graduate and professional enrollment at an all-time high, increasing by 255 last year to 3,831 this fall.

International students number 717 this fall, an increase of 133 from last year. More than 70 countries are represented in this group.

Foglesong says MSU also is increasing the number of students it retains from the freshman to sophomore years. Through the Pathfinders program, a mentoring and intervention effort, the retention rate for freshmen is 83.4%, another record.

Monday, June 12, 2006

YDMS Meeting June 24th

YOUNG DEMOCRATS OF MISSISSIPPI
MEETING
JUNE 24, 2006
Millsaps College = 1:00 p.m. = Olin Hall, Room 100
******ALSO******

The following officers & committees will also meet on June 24th:

9:00 a.m.-11:00 a.m. = Finance Committee = Phelps, Dunbar LLP, Jackson A & B Conference Room

9:00 a.m.-11:00 a.m. = State Presidents Council = Phelps, Dunbar LLP, New Orleans Conference Room

11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. = Regional Directors and Deputy Regional Directors = Phelps, Dunbar LLP, New Orleans Conference Room

******ALSO******

YDMS T-SHIRTS WILL BE AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE AT THE MEETING FOR THE FIRST TIME IN YEARS!!!!

Monday, May 15, 2006

Democrats National 6 Point Plan

Confident Democrats Lay Out Agenda

Democratic leaders, increasingly confident they will seize control of the House in November, are laying plans for a legislative blitz during their first week in power that would raise the minimum wage, roll back parts of the Republican prescription drug law, implement homeland security measures and reinstate lapsed budget deficit controls.

Every single day our operation across the country makes personal contact with more and more Americans. People are responding to our simple, common-sense agenda:

  1. Honest Leadership & Open Government -- We will end the Republican culture of corruption and restore a government as good as the people it serves.
  2. Real Security -- We will protect Americans at home and lead the world by telling the truth to our troops, our citizens and our allies.
  3. Energy Independence -- We will create a cleaner and stronger America by reducing our dependence on foreign oil.
  4. Economic Prosperity & Educational Excellence -- We will create jobs that will stay in America by restoring opportunity and driving innovation.
  5. A Healthcare System that Works for Everyone -- We will join 36 other industrialized nations by making sure everyone has access to affordable health care.
  6. Retirement Security -- We will ensure that a retirement with dignity is the right and expectation of every single American.These six simple points will be the keys to our victory in 2006.

http://www.democrats.org for more information about the 6 point plan and the democratic party

Friday, May 05, 2006

New College Dems Officers

On May 3rd, the MSU College Democrats elected their new officers for the upcoming 2006-2007 school year. They are young but talented and formidable, and I expect great things out of them. With that said, the new MSU College Democrats officers are:

Feel free to contact our officers for more information on how to get involved with the MSU College Democrats. Look for booths during summer orientation and for more information about upcoming summer planning meetings.

Also, the Democratic Primary for the mid-term election will be June 6th. The U.S. Senate candidates are State Rep. Erik Fleming, Mr. James O'Keefe, and Mr. Bill Bowlin. The U.S. House candidates for District 1 in Mississippi are Robert Shapiro and J. Ken Hurt. The U.S. House Candidates for District 2 in Mississippi are Congressman Bennie Thompson and Mr. Mike Espy. Congressman Gene Taylor is running for re-election in the 4th Congressional District. Sadly, there is no Democratic candidate to face 3rd District republican Congressman Chip Pickering.

As always, Vote Donkey and get involved.

Matthew Holmes, President Emeritus, MSU College Democrats

Thursday, February 02, 2006

Next College Democrats Meeting

The MSU College Democrats will meet at 5:00 next Wednesday, February 8th in Union 320. My apologies to the band members or others who have a 5:00 conflict. After thisweek, we will either meet at 6 or 7 on Monday's or Wednesdays. I will let you know several days in advance.

On the agenda:

1) SA candidates for office have asked to come speak.
2) YDMS Convention (March 31 & April 1)
3) Beans & Greens (March 6)
4) Speakers invites.
5) Use of SA Money

Matthew Holmes, MSU College Democrats

Monday, January 30, 2006

Protect Our College Loans

http://www.democracyinaction.com/dia/organizations/Katrina//petition.jsp?petition_KEY=192

"Congress is expected to vote on Wednesday to cut College Loans by $12.7 billion. Students from the Katrina disaster zone will feel these cuts harder than others. The financial burdens post-Katrina are monumental and these cuts only make recovery more difficult. The MS and LA Congressional Delegation has the swing votes to turn these cuts around. The same legislators that took so long to deliver basic services post-Katrina have an opportunity to demonstrate basic leadership on behalf of their already hurting constituents."

Please sign the petition located at the link above.

Thursday, January 26, 2006

Illegal Imigration, The MS Beef Plant Investigation, and the Failed Fathering of America

SEND RESPONSES TO SAM HALL (MS Democratic Party Communications Director) at SAM.HALL@MSDEMOCRATS.NET**** or comment right below the blog post.

1. The immigration debate is kicking off. I fear that this could become a knee-jerk reaction sort of thing. I hope people take pause to consider whatis actually at stake here, which are real people's lives and not somepolitical platform. Unfortunately, I don't think Lott really understands thesensitivity of the debate. His comment makes him sound like he's playingcowboy or something. It's sad if anyone, Republican or Democrat, tries toscore cheap points on this one. Here is a blog entry on the debate.

Illegal-immigrant bills draw critics - The Clarion-Ledger:

A Mississippi House hearing on limiting access to schools and jobs for illegal immigrants ended abruptly in a shouting match Wednesday as workeradvocates demanded to speak. Rep. Mike Lott, R-Petal, proposed several bills aimed at stopping illegalimmigration into Mississippi. "If you come to this country (illegally), Mississippi is not where you want to be," Lott said before the hearing.

2. On the one side, the good ole boys over at SuperTalk will have something to yap about. On the other side, this presumably brings us one step closer to them having to admit that our elected officials did nothing illegal. I'm half-way sure the world would stop spinning if one of those guys actually admitted such a thing. Those guys wrong? Never. Of course, I guess we could be surprised by the announcement and find out that every legislator who voted for the project was headed for indictments. That would mean the Bush DOJ would actually have to prosecute more Republicans. They're getting good at that. DeLay. Abramoff. Cunningham.

Beef probe results out today - The Clarion-Ledger:

Federal and state officials will release results today in Oxford of their year long criminal investigation into the state-backed Mississippi Beef Processors in Yalobusha County. Officials would not provide any details Wednesday or say if any charges would be filed in connection with the failed beef processing facility in Oakland. Assistant U.S. Attorney John Hailman, chief of the criminal division for thenorthern district, would only say the 11 a.m. news conference "will be inrelation to progress in the Mississippi Beef investigation."

3. I'm just assuming Bush wouldn't win the Healthcliff Huxtable Father ofthe Year Award...

As real father figure, Bush a 'deadbeat dad' - The Clarion-Ledger:

I'd like to talk about family values. Not the values of the individual family, but rather these same values applied to our nation as one big family. Conservatives understand that America is like a big family, with the President acting as a symbolic father figure: the leader and moral authorityof the traditional family.

What kind of father figure has President Bush been to the American family? One cannot invest in this way of thinking without arriving at a rather disquieting realization: President Bush is the metaphorical equivalent of an abusive and irresponsible deadbeat dad.

Bush Administration Turns Away Veterans at VA Hospitals

Received from: Keelan Sanders, Mississippi Democratic Party

Wednesday, January 25, 2006.

As you may know, more than 260,000 veterans who applied to receive healthcare at the Department of Veterans Affairs in FY2005 were turned away because of the Bush Administration's "cost-cutting" decision to limit veterans' access to VA hospitals, clinics and medications. Congressman LaneEvans (the Ranking Democrat on the House Veterans Affairs Committee)released the following state-by-state data which shows the number ofveterans who have been denied health care in each state. Also below, pleasefind an AP article that was filed as a result of Rep. Evans' release.

EVANS STATEMENT: Administration Turned Away 260,000 Veterans Who Sought VA Care in 2005Washington, D.C.

More than 260,000 veterans applied to receive healthcare at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) in fiscal year 2005 but were turned away because of the Bush Administration's cost-cutting decision tolimit veterans' access to VA hospitals, clinics and medications. Rep. LaneEvans (D-IL), the ranking Democratic member of the House Veterans AffairsCommittee, is calling on President Bush to seek adequate funding in FY 2007 to allow these veterans to get care and medications at the VA. TheAdministration will submit its budget request to the Congress on February 6.

"There is no reason for the VA to give the cold shoulder to veterans whohave served our country honorably," said Evans. "The problem is not thatveterans are seeking health care from the VA, the problem is that theAdministration would rather bar the doors and ration care than put forth anadequate budget to cover the needs of veterans."

Since January 17, 2003, the Administration has barred access to VA care to new Priority 8 veterans -- those who do not receive monetary compensationfrom VA for service-connected disabilities and whose incomes are above anational and geographic income threshold. In 2005, the national incomemeans threshold for a single veteran was $25,842. The geographic meansthreshold for 2005 by state and county can be found at the VA's Web site at http://www.va.gov/healtheligibility/costs/docs/GMT_Income_Thresholds_2004.pdf . VA estimated that from January 2003 through September 2005 it would bar more than half a million veterans.

Data show that the VA turned away nearly 9,000 Illinois veterans who appliedfor VA health care in FY 2005 due to the Administration's enrollment ban [state-by-state list below]. Evans said he is concerned that the number of veterans shut out of VA health care is considerably larger because veterans are discouraged from even applying for care.

STATE-BY-STATE IMPACT OF ENROLLMENT BAN IN FY 2005:

Number of veterans in each state and territory who applied for VA-providedhealth care and who were refused enrollment in FY 2005 because of theAdministration's decision to bar access for new Priority 8 veterans.

AK 578
AL 5,004
AR 4,983
AZ 5,835
CA 17,378
CO 3,599
CT 2,651
DC 164
DE 877
FL 27,465
GA 7,062
HI 710
IA 4,762
ID 1,608
IL 8,944
IN 5,700
KS 2,878
KY 4,506
LA 4,893
MA 3,509
MD 3,051
ME 2,403
MI 5,942
MN 5,319
MO 5,552
MS 4,308
MT 1,956
NC 10,405
ND 927
NE 1,991
NH 1,434
NJ 4,808
NM 1,851
NV 2,111
NY 9,357
OH 9,764
OK 4,013
OR 4,162
PA 13,262
RI 1,045
SC 5,964
SD 1,201
TN 6,165
TX 19,204
UT 1,361
VA 5,459
VT 751
WA 4,584
WI 6,622
WV 2,550
WY 777
Guam/Puerto Rico/ Virgin Islands 1,059
Unknown/ Other Territory 793

Beans & Greens

Come join the College Democrats and the Oktibbeha County Democratic Party for great food and plenty of fun with great Democrats.

What: Our annual Beans & Greens Dinner

Hosted by: the MSU College Dems in conjunction with the Oktibbeha County Democratic Party

When: Monday, March 6th at 6:30

Where: Bost Auditorium on the campus of Mississippi State University.

Tickets: $5 for students and $10 for adults (can be purchased beforehand or at the door)

Speaker: To be announced at a later date.

State Legislature Townhall Meeting

What: The annual townhall meeting with our state legislatures (both republican andDemocrat)

Hosted by: The Federation of Democratice Women

When: this Saturday morning (January 28th) from 9 until 12

Where: the second floor of the Court House.

Refreshments will be provided. Come on out and ask questions of your local legislatures.
  • Rep. Tyrone Ellis = D
  • Sen. Bennie Turner = D
  • Rep. Danny Reed = R
  • Rep. Gary Chism = R
  • Sen. Gary Jackson =R

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

CD's Position on Alito Nomination

Below are the questions posed to the College Democrats President by the Reflector concering the Alito confirmation hearings.

1. Would the appointment of alito push forward an already Republican controlled government? Why? The appointment of Alito will make a reasonably balanced court more conservative, but not excessively so due to the recent appointment of a more moderate Cheif Justice Roberts to replace the very conservatice former Chief Justice William Rehnquist.

2. What do you think a confirmation of Alito will mean for the U.S. Supreme court and even the justice system in general? My opinion is that Chief Justice Roberts will now replace Justice O’Connor as the pivotal swing vote. Slightly more conservative but younger and with youth comes new experiences. That youth has improved our Constitution progressively over the last 200 years and my hope is that improvements will continue.

3. What sorts of concerns does Alito's nomination raise for you, as a Democrat? That he would vote to ban abortion, that he would continue to uphold the ban on gay marriage, that he would rubber stamp the President’s spying on innocent Americans without warrant, and most of all, we never really know how a Justice will vote until they lay their gavel down for the first time under a lifetime appointment.

4. Do you think there are any better candidates? If so, who and why. Do you think that Bush should've nominated a less conservative, more middle ground judge? Why? Alito’s qualified as a judge based on work experience but I’m sure the Justices that upheld slavery and segregation were too. The important thing is Ideology, and well, that Depends on what one believes is right and wrong and where those beliefs enter their legal perspective. As I stated in the previous question, you never know for sure until the Justice takes off their robe and lays their gavel down a couple of times.

5. How do you think this probable appointment will affect students today, if at all? The Supreme Court interprets the Supreme Law of the Land. What we as Americans can and cannot do. They have only been amended 27 times in over 200 years. They have the power to govern the governing from the President down to the City Council. And they can only be removed by death or criminal impeachment. That’s true power.

6. Do you think this nomination and confirmation process has been fair? No, it has not. It has been governed by partisanship on both sides and that is unfair to the American people. Republicans have staunchly attacked Democrats for questioning the nominee in hearings, something the Republicans apparently don't realize is the job of the Judiciary Comittee. Especially, Reuplican Senator Orrin Hatch who might as well graveled at Alito's feet than been at the hearings. We believe that when the Senate investigates, they better do their job to the fullest extent possible because over 280 million lives now and more in the future depend on it.

7. Do you think Alito will be confirmed? Why? Yes, for three reasons. One, the numbers in the Republican led Judiciary Committee and Senate seem to point in his favor. Two, Alito appears committed to continue through with no major political bombshell having appeared to derail him. And third and probably most important, Alito is more conservative than O’Connor but Chief Justice Roberts appears to be more moderate than Rehnquist and Alito making the now younger court only slightly more conservative.

8. What are your hopes for our future if Alito is confirmed? My hope is the same for any Supreme Court Judge. That our Constitution continue to grow as it has in the last 200 years to better respect our independence as individuals, our privacy to lead our own lives and businesses, and equality for all. We, as Americans, still have a ways to go, especially on the issues of equality (i.e. gay marriage).

Monday, January 23, 2006

January County Dems Meeting

The Oktibbeha County Democratic Party will have its first meeting of the new year this Tuesday, January 24th at 6:00 pm on the 3rd floor of the AmSouth Building (cornerof Jackson and Main). The county party encourages all Democrat minded individuals to attend, time permitting. The agenda and report from the meeting will be posted on the blog at a later time.

Upcoming SMA Events

Below are a list of upcoming events hosted by the non-partisan Stennis Montgomery Association that ya'll may be interested in:

1) January 31 at 6:30 at the Stennis Institute - Winter Reception honoring Dr. J. Charles Lee and other administrators.

2) February 2 at 3:00 in the Library's John Grisham Room = Speaker Seriesfeaturing Charlie Cook of the Cook Political Report. Mr. Cook will speak on theinteresting topic of 2008 Presidential Prospects and is considered one of thetop political analysts in the nation.

3) March 6 at 6:00pm at the Perry Cafeteria = Speaker Series featuring former U.S. Representatives are Earl Hutto (D-FL) and Ed Derwinski (R-Il) (George H.W.Bush's Secretary of Veterans Affairs). Dinner with the two former U.S.Representatives.

Thanks to Edward Sanders (President of the Stennis MontgomeryAssociation) and Dr. Marty Wiseman (Director of the Stennis Institute ofGovernment) for bringing these great speakers to our great campus. I encourage everyone to try and attend at least one of these quality events.

MDP January 19, 2006

SEND RESPONSES TO SAM HALL ATSAM.HALL@MSDEMOCRATS.NET****

1. We can all believe the audacity of the governor by now. I'm not surewhere to begin on his hypocriticalness. Let's start by the fact that he'sbeing irresponsible by trying to scare municipalities and educators. Thiswill not affect MAEP funding, and the Legislature will fix any shortfallsfor municipalities. This has already been guaranteed. And to listen to thegovernor say he is against any bill that would put an unfunded mandate on alower government is preposterous. His refusal to fund state services at anadequate level has passed the tax burden to our cities and counties for twoyears. This is a good bill, and the governor's veto should be overridden!

Tax bill up in smoke? - The Clarion-Ledger:
http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060119/NEWS010504/601190372

Lt. Gov. Amy Tuck's bold tax bill is back in her court today.Gov. HaleyBarbour on Wednesday sent a bill that raises the cigarette tax whilelowering the cost of a trip to the grocery store back to the Legislature ina rare veto ceremony."It is irresponsible to cut Mississippi's budget revenue while we're tryingto recover from Hurricane Katrina, but this bill does that," Barbour saidbefore the veto.

2. The C-L is still fighting the good fight on the Grocery Tax Bill. Veto - The Clarion-Ledger:
http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060119/OPINION01/601190330/0/OPINION

Gov. Haley Barbour makes a very persuasive argument for vetoing theLegislature's tobacco/grocery tax shift, but his view is askew in severalrespects.The bill would hike cigarette taxes from the country's third lowest rate at18 cents per pack to $1 by 2007 and phase out the 7 percent sales tax ongroceries. Barbour complains that it will take revenue from cities that needit at a difficult time and that the tobacco tax won't make up for thelosses. The impact numbers are educated guesses, but hiking tobacco taxesand eliminating grocery taxes may not be revenue neutral. That is still noreason not to do it.

3. The Jackson Free Press has an interesting discussion going on about the governor's veto of the grocery bill.

Jackson Free Press Barbour: 'Why I'll Veto the Tax Bill':
http://www.jacksonfreepress.com/comments.php?id=8312_0_27_0_C

4. The Meridian Star has endorsed the Grocery Tax Cut Bill.
Meridian Mississippi News - The Meridian Star: http://www.meridianstar.com/articles/2006/01/19/opinions/editorials/c-edi.txt

Gov. Haley Barbour finds himself in a political pickle early in the 2006legislative session. By Thursday, he must decide whether to sign or veto abill, passed overwhelmingly by the Legislature, to jack up the state'scigarette tax and phase out its sales tax on groceries. Barbour has a thirdoption, which we recommend he exercise: Let the bill become law without hissignature.

--Sam R. Hall, Communications Director, Mississippi Democratic Party--
--Office: (601) 969-2913 Cell: (601) 832-8909 www.msdemocrats.netsam.hall@msdemocrats.net

MDP January 18, 2006

SEND RESPONSES TO SAM HALL ATSAM.HALL@MSDEMOCRATS.NET****

PRESS CLIPPINGS: Wednesday, January 18, 2006

1. Can you believe there is shock over the fact that the coast still has along way to go? It shows you exactly how out-of-touch Congress is with whatis going on in Mississippi and Louisiana. It also shows exactly how poor ofa job Gov. Barbour has done in relaying to his Republican cronies theentirety of the disaster that is Katrina.

Coast progress disappoints - The Clarion Ledger:http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060118/NEWS0110/601180355GULFPORT

Members of a U.S. Senate committee said Tuesday they weresurprised to see so much debris still covering Mississippi's Gulf Coast morethan four months after Hurricane Katrina wiped out 65,000 houses and 2,000businesses.Senators of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee flewover the Coast with Mississippi first lady Marsha Barbour and spent a fewhours in Gulfport to listen to testimony from federal, state and localofficials about recovery delays and the needs they face. Afterward, theytraveled to New Orleans to tour the city and listen to witness testimony.

Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D-Connecticut, said he and committee chairwoman SusanCollins, R-Maine, first toured the devastated Coast a few weeks after thestorm. He said the mountains of debris he saw Tuesday took him aback.

2. How dare Mike Moore try to do something like curb teen smoking andprotect the nation's most successful smoking cessation program from beingkilled by a former tobacco-lobbyist-turned-governor. Such arrogance MikeMoore has to do something that would make our state a healthier place tolive. Doesn't he know he can make millions on top of millions of dollars byworking for Big Tobacco, becoming governor and then threatening to veto suchheinous legislation like the bill that would raise the cigarette tax whileending the grocery tax? Really, now, Mr. Moore. If you continue yourcrusade, the people of Mississippi might actually expect more out of ourstate leaders. We wouldn't want that, would we?

Partnership funding bills seek to end political feud The Clarion-Ledger: http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060118/NEWS010504/601180351/1001

Bills awaiting debate in the Mississippi Legislature are designed to diffusea political battle over state funding for anti-smoking programs, formerAttorney General Mike Moore says.House Bill 1115 and Senate Bill 2760 say legislators ‹ not a judge ‹ woulddirect $20 million a year to a private, nonprofit group called ThePartnership for a Healthy Mississippi.Moore, chairman of the Partnership's board of directors, said he askedlawmakers to make the change."In an overarching effort to try to end the controversy that has continuedfor years and years about how the Partnership money is appropriated and toget the talk radio silent and to get all the politics and nuisances out ofthis successful program, we are going to attempt to make sure that the moneyis appropriated by the Legislature to the Partnership," Moore said Tuesday.

3. I don't think he listened...Tax swap - The Clarion-Ledger: http://www.clarionledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060118/OPINION01/601180317/0/OPINION

Gov. Haley Barbour shouldn't foist his personal political will upon thepeople of Mississippi by vetoing the Legislature's tobacco tax hike andgrocery sales tax elimination.The tax swap serves the people by hiking the cigarette tax to nationallevels while phasing out the state's sales tax on food.Cutting the tax on food puts about $250 per year in the pockets of a familyof four that spends about $300 a month on groceries. The tobacco tax wouldraise Mississippi's 18-cents-per-pack tax on cigarettes to 75 cents a packJuly 1, then to $1 a pack on July 1, 2007. The national average tobacco taxis 92 cents per pack.

4. He voted for the bill before he voted against it. But not a damned thinghas changed in the bill. Perhaps Sen. Chaney just wanted to protect his seaton the state plane.Oh. And don't believe the hogwash about fully funding education. Chaneywouldn't support that either, because his political guru ­ that would beGov. Barbour ­ is not in favor of doing so.

Key senator changes mind on tax bill - djournal.com:
http://www.djournal.com/pages/story.asp?ID=210804&pub=1&div=News

JACKSON - Sen. Mike Chaney, R-Vicksburg, said late Tuesday he would vote touphold Gov. Haley Barbour's expected veto of legislation that phases out thetax on groceries.Barbour will hold a 6 p.m. news conference today to announce whether he willsign or veto the legislation. Legislators said they were confident thatBarbour would veto the bill.On Tuesday, various legislators said the governor was working hard to flipthe votes needed to sustain a pending veto of the legislation, which passedboth the House and the Senate with more than the two-thirds majority neededto override a gubernatorial veto.Chaney, a Tupelo native, said he ischanging his vote "because you cannot have the largest tax cut in statehistory and at the same time be a proponent of fully funding education."

--Sam R. HallCommunications DirectorMississippi Democratic Party--Office: (601) 969-2913Cell: (601) 832-8909Fax: (601) 354-1599--www.msdemocrats.net/home.htmBLOG: www.msdemocrats.net/blog.htm--sam.hall@msdemocrats.net

Sunday, January 22, 2006

Welcome

Welcome to the official blog of the Mississippi State University College Democrats. The purpose of the blog is to surve as an easier to edit and maintain version of the MSU College Democrats website for those lacking web skills. Here is a list of what will likely be posted to the blog:
  1. Meeting Agendas
  2. Upcoming Events or Activities
  3. The Lastest MSU College Democrats News
  4. Press releases from the Mississippi Democratic Party
  5. Member Articles
  6. Stuff that is Democrat related