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Return to class tough for vets
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) | Returning home after three tours of duty in Afghanistan, Derek Blumke was eager to return to college. But the Air Force veteran felt unwelcome at the University of Michigan as he tried alone to manage the transition from warrior to student. During one of his initial calls to the school, employees told him they couldn't answer his questions because he wasn't yet a student. Later, he found himself wandering around the Ann Arbor campus, trying to figure out how to use his military benefits to pay tuition and feeling like no one would help.

"I was frustrated and angry and disappointed," said the 26-year-old former gunship maintenance supervisor who's now a senior studying political science and psychology at Michigan. "That frustration and anger turned into motivation. You don't want me here? OK, fine. I WILL come here."

As veterans of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq return to campus, many are finding that colleges and universities are only beginning to figure out how to help them transition back to civilian, social and academic life. Many need help with paperwork. Others seek emotional and psychological support, and some struggle to fit in with classmates who are often much younger.
Posted by: Steve White 2008-07-23
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=244936