![]() I'll be taking your feedback and helping to answer questions about the e-edition at /LSJnews. Contact her at me this Saturday, March 5, from 7-9 a.m. Stephanie Angel is executive editor of the Lansing State Journal. Your subscription helps us deliver the news and information this community needs. We look forward to partnering with you as we continue to serve Greater Lansing through important local journalism. If you have questions about your subscription or the changes, check out or contact our customer service department at (800) 234-1719. Whew! That’s a lot of change for one column. READ MORE: 7 reasons to subscribe, from exclusive stories to daily e-edition And we’re also providing answers to all the daily puzzles at. If you’re wondering where to find the answers to Friday’s puzzles, they will be in Saturday’s e-edition. We’re also replacing our TV grids with a curated "What to Watch" module. News of the Weird and Isaac Asimov’s Super Quiz will no longer publish. They will be centralized in the Life section, meaning that’s where you’ll now find Jumble and Sudoku. Once you enter their name and email address, they will be sent a message with further instructions to set up their guest access.Īlso on Saturday, the LSJ will launch a few changes to its puzzles and games. Next, select "Manage Account" from the drop down and then "Share digital subscription" from the menu on the left. Instead, you can find the e-edition (a digital replica of the paper) at LSJ.com.Ĭlick on the e-edition tab in the black bar at the top of the page, or from the drop down menu where it says, "Hi, ” if you are already logged in. The LSJ will no longer deliver a print edition to homes and newsstands. We’re glad the Free Press gave space to Schor and Couch to answer Kaffer’s ill-advised writing, but we think the Free Press should formally retract Kaffer’s piece and issue an apology to the people of Lansing.The Lansing State Journal is asking its print readers to embrace a new reading habit with a Saturday digital only version of the paper, starting on March 5. Doing so only undermines any academic arguments one makes. We’d disagree with those arguments, but one could make them.īut one doesn’t have to discredit an entire town and its people to make one’s point, even if that point is tongue-in-cheek. Lansing State Journal columnist Graham Couch grades Michigan States performance in its 41-7 home loss to Washington on a scale of 1-10. We’re glad Kaffer has pride in her hometown, and, certainly, one could make some academic arguments for moving the capital. The state recently invested in the Capitol facility to add a new welcome center that improves security and provides the tens of thousands of schoolchildren who visit the Capitol every year with new educational opportunities. Lansing has been the state capital since 1847, when famed architect Elijah Myers designed a beautiful statehouse full of incredible architecture and symbolic art. We’re certainly not going to do that by tearing each other down or through ill-informed editorials that call any of our cities ‘sad.'” The governor created a task force to find ways to get more people to live and work in Michigan. Lansing Mayor Andy Schor, his own Free Press piece, said Kaffer’s “column, even if a joke, chose to spread negativity. Graham Couch, a Lansing State Journal sportswriter who frequently contributes to the Free Press, wrote in a column answering Kaffer’s writing and published by the Freep that “the shots fired at Lansing were laced with disdain and BS and, given the size of Kaffer’s platform and how often people ignorantly punch down at (Lansing), the column cannot be ignored.”
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