Detroit, MI
Michigan House considering legislation that would curtail book bans
(CBS DETROIT) – A pair of bills in the Michigan House, introduced by Democrats, aim to make it more difficult to implement book bans in our state.
The bills would set requirements before books could be removed from shelves at community and district libraries but not school libraries.
“Depending on what they’re banning, I mean, if they’re banning pornography, I’m all for it, but if they’re banning our history, I’m against it,” said Doug Freeman, who was at the East Lansing Public Library on Tuesday with his granddaughter.
The bills, also called The Freedom to Read Act, would limit who can challenge library materials to community residents, require challenges to certify they have read or watched the material they want removed, require library directors to decide what is on the shelves and only allow libraries to approve removals if the material has been determined to be obscene by the United States or Michigan Constitution.
“In a way, it’s better to view it as more of a conversation between patron and library because we want to hear their voices, and a lot of times folks are just wanting to be heard and this is sometimes the way they feel most able to be heard,” said Chrissie Evaskis who works as a collection development librarian at the East Lansing Public Library.
Evaskis-Garrett says that while libraries like hers already use some of the requirements outlined in the bill package, she feels it’s a good idea to make them law.
“There’s this idea that we’re just willy-nilly out here purchasing whatever books strike our fancy, and we’re really not so kind of having those things codified, I think not necessarily protects us but the freedom of information in general,” said Evaskis-Garrett.
Freeman doesn’t want to see one person make decisions about which books go on the shelves. He says it’s important to think of his granddaughter.
“I want her to know the true history of our country,” he said.
Detroit, MI
Kevin McGonigle crushes 1st MLB home run for Detroit Tigers
Detroit Tigers manager A.J. Hinch on Kevin McGonigle’s home opener
Tigers manager A.J. Hinch spoke about how rookie infielder Kevin McGonigle experienced his first home game as a Tiger, April 3, 2026.
Kevin McGonigle finally has his first home run in the major leagues.
McGonigle, the Detroit Tigers’ sensational rookie, blasted a ball 408 feet to deep right field off Miami Marlins right-hander Sandy Alcántara on Sunday, April 12, at Comerica Park, giving the Tigers a 4-0 lead in the fifth inning.
McGonigle hit the ball with a 108.8 mph exit velocity.
Alcántara, the 2022 National League Cy Young award winner, threw him a first-pitch 97 mph four-seam fastball.
Celebrate Kevin McGonigle on Tigers with this Free Press print
McGonigle, in his 16th game this season, is hitting .310, behind only Colt Keith on the Tigers. McGonigle has six doubles.
“Fly ball, right field, deep, got a chance, No. 1 for Kevin McGonigle!” Dan Dickerson said on the TV broadcast.
McGonigle previously twice crushed a ball to the wall earlier this season, only to result in a loud out.
Against the San Diego Padres in his second MLB game March 27, McGonigle was robbed of a home run in center field by Jackson Merrill. He hit the ball 403 feet, connecting for a 104.2 mph exit velocity.
In his first at-bat in the Tigers’ home opener April 3, against the St. Louis Cardinals, McGonigle again smashed a ball 403 feet, with a 103.5 mph exit velo to the warning track in left-center. It would have been a home run in 12 MLB parks − but not at Comerica Park.
Celebrate Kevin McGonigle’s MLB debut with this Detroit Free Press print
McGonigle’s Opening Day debut is worth framing and the Free Press has a page print for you.
Follow our Tigers coverage all year long: freep.com/sports/tigers
Detroit, MI
Boos rain down on Red Wings after missing playoffs for 10th straight season
Detroit Red Wings missed the playoffs for the 10th consecutive season after 5-3 loss to New Jersey.
Red Wings missed the playoffs for the 10th consecutive season after 5-3 loss to New Jersey.
Detroit — The boos were loud and stinging and showed how frustrated Red Wings fans are.
They rained down after the Wings’ 5-3 loss to New Jersey, officially eliminating the Wings from the Stanley Cup playoffs, and during the final minutes as the Wings struggled to generate a goal and at least earn a point for the standings.
They didn’t score. They lost. And fans let them hear about it.
The Wings now own the longest streak of not making the playoffs in the NHL, at 10 consecutive seasons. Without a doubt, fans aren’t happy about it.
Coach and players understood the booing, accepted it as the fans simply not being happy with the same outcome now, season after season.
“This is Detroit, this is Hockeytown,” said coach Todd McLellan, who was an assistant coach on the Wings’ last Stanley Cup winning team in 2008. “I’ve been lucky enough to be on the other side of it, when they couldn’t stop cheering for this team. They’re dying for that. They crave that.
“That’s what they want, and I don’t even know if they want a Stanley Cup championship anymore. They just want a team that will come and give them something to cheer about.”
Players in the last few weeks referenced the “outside noise” from fans, alluding to the pressure or negativism from fans, and they have been attempting to keep it outside of the locker room.
The fans, said McLellan, have the right to express their opinions after 25 consecutive years of making the playoffs with four Stanley Cups during that timeframe.
“This outside noise stuff or whatever, that’s inside noise, those are our fans in our building and they pay to watch us play, and we get paid well to perform for them,” McLellan said. “They’re fulling entitled to their opinion and we deserve that opinion.
“There’s no other way to sugarcoat it. That’s what we earned.”
Captain Dylan Larkin said it was “difficult” to hear the booing.
“Our fans are great, they are passionate and they care about winning,” Larkin said. “There’s been some great years here and they want us back to that. That’s what they expect here.”
Lucas Raymond said it “stinks” to end the season the way the Wings did, and have fans boo at Little Caesars Arena.
“We had a clear goal coming into this year and we didn’t do it,” Raymond said. “We had plenty of opportunities throughout this season and especially down the stretch.”
McLellan feels the Wings need to do a better job of facing and conquering the pressure and challenge of meaningful games late in the season.
“I felt a little bit of that last year, I’ve lived a year of it now and it’s there,” said McLellan of the external pressure. “But we keep earning that. We earned that pressure and that outside (“noise”) but you can except the pressure as challenge or you can succumb to it and we seem to choose the second one (succumb to it).
“That’s the way it is and the only way you get out of it is, you work your way out of it.”
tkulfan@detroitnews.com
@tkulfan
Detroit Red Wings sign autographs after season’s final home game
Marco Kasper, Simon Edvinsson, Emmitt Finnie and the rest of the Red Wings signed hockey sticks for fans after the game
Detroit, MI
Metro Detroit Weather Forecast, April 11, 2026 — 8:15 AM Update
NEWS
4Warn Meteorologist Bryan Schuerman talks about the dry start to the weekend before rain and thunderstorm chances move back in by the end of the weekend.
The 4Warn Weather team tracks the latest weather alerts in Metro Detroit and Southeast Michigan. Get the most updated information here: https://www.clickondetroit.com/weather/
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