Tuesday, April 7, 2026

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NEWS

$2K of $20K reward fund distributed by police

Although $20,000 was set aside as a reward for any information regarding December’s civil disturbances in Cedar Village, only about $2,000 of the fund has been shelled out to informants, according to East Lansing police. Following December’s Big Ten championship, thousands of students flocked to Cedar Village, chanting and burning furniture and nearly anything in their path. By the time the disturbance was dispersed at about 3 a.m.

FEATURES

East Lansing Film Festival contest to begin

The East Lansing Film Festival is launching its Five Days/Five Minutes film contest this week. The contest, which starts on Jan. 30 and runs through Feb. 4, will give filmmakers a chance to come and write, shoot and edit their own original film, which can run anywhere from five to seven minutes or 120 hours. Participants were required to register last September.

FEATURES

A musical journey down the Silk Road

As traditional Chinese instruments were plucked, an unexpected song with a distinctly Asian feel blossomed — “Hey Jude” by the The Beatles filled the room as a Chinese orchestra practiced. Silk Road Chinese Orchestra is the first MSU orchestra to use only traditional Chinese instruments. The musicians play an assortment of both Chinese and American songs.

COMMENTARY

Keep a food log

Most girls have an addiction to buying shoes. I have an addiction to buying journals. I have accumulated more of them than I could possibly count. My collection ranges from simple, cardboard books to nice, leather bound pages.

MICHIGAN

Police pay out $2K of $20K reward for information on December 'civil disturbance'

East Lansing police have only awarded $2,000 in reward money so far to informants with information regarding December’s “civil disturbance” in Cedar Village, officials said Monday. It’s a comparatively small amount of the $20,000 allocated to rewarding those who came forward and assisted police with identifying key players in the chaos following the MSU football team’s win over Ohio State in the Big Ten Championship game.

MEN'S BASKETBALL

Izzo right to be proud of players

When MSU fans were sulking after the 80-75 loss to No. 21 Michigan, Tom Izzo took the podium to address the heartbreaking game. “In the 30 years I’ve been here, I’ve never been more proud of a team,” he said. Wait, what? MSU just dropped a game against their rival to fall behind in the Big Ten title race, and he used the word “proud?” Well, as weird as it seems to say after losing such a marquee game, he’s right on the money. There is no question the Wolverines deserved to win Saturday’s game — they hit all the shots when they needed to in front of the delirious Breslin Center crowd. Yet at the same time, the Spartans took a few steps in the right direction without two of their biggest players. Missing two starters in Adreian Payne and Branden Dawson, Izzo was forced to play some guys who usually only see the court during warmups. Besides Gary Harris’s 27 points and Keith Appling’s double-double, freshman guard Alvin Ellis was the bright point during a loss at the hands of the Wolverines. To be honest, Ellis looked like anything but a first-year player.

NEWS

Proposal could appropriate 50K work visas to immigrants

Gov. Rick Snyder announced a proposal Thursday to revitalize Detroit by appropriating 50,000 work visas for skilled immigrants willing to work in the city. The visas would be doled out over five years, with an intended effect of reversing Detroit’s slumping economy and shrinking population, Snyder said in a statement.