Tuesday, April 14, 2026

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SPORTS

Spartan hockey team prepares for rivalry with Wolverines

The Baltimore Ravens’ record-setting defense will get most of the national attention this Super Bowl weekend, but there’s also a dominant defensive crew based in East Lansing. The top-ranked Spartan hockey team (21-1-4 overall, 14-1-3 CCHA) has suffocated opposing offenses in 2001, allowing only one goal in seven games in the new year.

MICHIGAN

Number of flu cases to increase

The flu has been slowly making its rounds and the worst may still be on the way. Last year influenza reached its height in December, but this year the bug has been delayed throughout the nation, including Michigan, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The flu causes 20,000 deaths and 110,000 hospitalizations each year in the United States. English freshman Allyson Stanley had the flu during winter break, but didn’t go to the doctor. “I figured if it ended within a day, then I wouldn’t go, but if it persisted, I would go to the doctor,” she said.

FEATURES

Mardi Gras free-for-all

Last spring break, Andrea Simonelli indulged with the best of them at Mardi Gras, drinking Cuervo Boats - Jose Cuervo, Malibu rum and ice - out of fishbowls and partying with her best friend. And although the New Orleans celebration, chock full of elaborate gaudiness, body parts and bright plastic beads, doesn’t fall on MSU’s spring break this year, she plans to do it all again. “We fell in love with the place,” said Simonelli, a political theory junior.

NEWS

Yearbook disagrees with bill

A bill expected to establish a compromise for editorial control of the Red Cedar Log faced heavy discussion late Thursday night.The measure, introduced by Chrystal Price, the Black Student Alliance representative for the ASMSU Student Assembly, and Women’s Council representative Melanie Olmsted, was organized through a combined effort by student government members and Red Cedar Log staff during an ASMSU policy meeting Monday.“We made a lot of concessions,” Price said about the proposed settlement bill.But, Red Cedar Log Editor-in-Chief Rianne Jones says the proposal is still not satisfactory in its current form.

MSU

Minority speaker series to host civil rights activists

Four theologians who experienced the American Civil Rights Movement firsthand will bring their stories and perspectives to MSU for Black History Month, which starts Thursday. The speakers will come to campus as part of the Visiting Minority Lecture Series titled “Slavery to Freedom: An American Odyssey.” The series is presented by MSU’s College of Osteopathic Medicine and is a joint effort by the university and the state of Michigan to increase MSU’s minority faculty pool without hiring lecturers full-time. “This allows us to tap our resources nationwide to bring speakers to campus and make them more accessible to students and faculty,” said Sandy Kilbourn, the college’s executive director for external programs. Kicking off the series will be the Rev.

COMMENTARY

Jackson cartoon was degrading

I really see why Martin Luther King Jr. dared to dream what he did. I can’t even describe how I feel every time I read a book, a paper or see someone on television who insists on promoting stereotypes about my people and/or maintaining them. In Wednesday’s State News, the Rev.

FEATURES

Skiing Michigan

Marf Khan stood at the bottom of a 250-foot tall ski hill, staring it down like a timid David mustering up the courage to battle the giant Goliath. Mount Brighton Ski Area’s highest peak was to be Khan’s crowning achievement on his first day with skis attached to his boots. It was an achievement that could come one of two ways - either he would overcome his anxiousness or be dragged up the hill kicking and screaming by his two more experienced friends who talked him into joining them for a day on the slopes. Khan and his friends are among thousands of Michiganians taking advantage of nearby slopes during what is being called the state’s best ski season in three years. “I’ve done the bunny hill and the other small stuff,” said Khan, a graduate student at Wayne State University.

NEWS

State reps commence for new session

LANSING - State representatives shined their shoes, wore their first-day outfits and prepared to run a new Legislature on Thursday during opening day of session at the state Capitol.Members packed their briefcases, kissed their families good-bye and hit the road to Lansing.“We had co-sponsorship memos, it sort of gets things started and gets the juices flowing,” said state Rep.

MSU

U researchers investigate corn spacing, create adaptive equipment

MSU crop and soil science professors are researching what may be the wave of the future for growing corn.Kurt Thelen, professor of crop and soil sciences, has been researching the effects of growing corn in narrow 15-inch rows in comparison to the traditional 30-inch rows that many farmers around the country employ.The study began in 1997.“Historically it’s always been the planting implements that spaced rows of corn,” Thelen said.

MICHIGAN

Faculty help ease transition into college

Marqus Coleman knows what he’ll be doing after he graduates from East Lansing High School in June.He’ll attend Defiance College in Ohio.“The counselors at my school helped me with deciding but my mom and my dad always told me that I had to do something after high school,” Coleman said.Although the senior high school student’s decision was influenced by his counselors and parents, MSU officials say the trend is for prospective college students to get too wrapped up with career plans.William Metcalfe, a psychologist at MSU’s Counseling Center, said he talks with MSU students who are concerned about their niche at college and about future careers.“Sometimes I’ll see students early on adjusting to just what this place is like, where their niche is and what their opportunities are here,” he said.

SPORTS

Backup wrestlers enjoy extra playing experience

They work their hardest in practice and push the starters to the limit every day. Then as match time approaches, they promptly sit and watch, hoping the next time it will be them on the mat trying to contribute to the eighth-ranked MSU wrestling squad in the same way their counterparts in practice do.

NEWS

ASMSU and Red Cedar Log reach agreement

While three intricate parts of the bill that was expected to establish a settlement between the ASMSU Student Assembly and the Red Cedar Log regarding editorial control of the yearbook were approved Thursday, two other sections were denied.The assembly voted in favor of amendments that will establish a Diversity Managing Editor on the Red Cedar Log as well as requiring the Student Assembly vice chairperson of internal affairs two submit two detailed reports concerning the publication’s content.“I am very excited that those parts of the bill got passed,” said Melanie Olmsted, the Women’s Council representative for the assembly.Denied were the amendments that would have granted the assembly discretionary power over actions performed by the yearbook that are deemed inappropriate.“I am happy with the decision.

COMMENTARY

Man identified in wrong manner

In the Wednesday issue of The State News, a police brief stated a robbery suspect was a masked man and described him as Asian Pacific. This is an amazing and disturbing description of a criminal perpetrator that could have serious repercussions in a community with a small population of Asian, Asian American and Pacific Islander students, staff and faculty. I would like to know how a masked man could be described as Asian Pacific.

MICHIGAN

House rejects pay increase

It is not often that 100 people would each turn down $20,000.“Have you ever voted down a pay raise?” asked House Speaker Rick Johnson, R-LeRoy, in his office Monday.The state House rejected a pay raise of that amount Thursday in a 100-6 vote.

NEWS

LoveLine returns to airwaves after listener protest

Fans that thought WWDX-FM (92.1) gave LoveLine a final “mahalo” earlier this week will be happy to know they’ll be able to tune in to the syndicated call-in show once again - it will just be one hour later.A few dozen protesters showed up outside the 92.1 studio in Holt on Thursday to pound on windows, honk horns and chant for LoveLine’s return to local radio.LoveLine is a syndicated Los Angeles-based call-in show that offers answers to questions about substance abuse and STDs, along with advice about relationships and sex.The protesters came to the studio at the invitation of its evening radio-personality Ty “The Nighttime Guy,” who decided to take a stand against his station’s decision during his Wednesday night broadcast from 7 p.m.

COMMENTARY

No support

Then President-elect George W. Bush announced his nomination of Ashcroft for attorney general Dec.

FEATURES

Weekend Guide

Friday: DJ AJ will spin house and trance at Troppo, 213 Ann St. He takes the stage at 10 p.m.