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MF MF DMGK Detroit City Football Club midfielder and MSU alumnus Cyrus Saydee looks to pass to teammates during a match against Michigan Stars Football Club on Friday.
Michigan Stars Football Club midfielder and MSU alumnus Ali Cheaib looks to pass during the match against Detroit City Football Club on Friday.
Detroit City Football Club captain and defenseman Josh Rogers, an MSU alumnus, looks to pass to teammates during a match against Michigan Stars Football Club on Friday.
Lansing United goalkeeper Zach Bennett practices with the team Tuesday at Lansing Indoor Sports Arena, 5849 Enterprise Drive, in Lansing. Bennett is also one of the current starting goalkeepers for MSU soccer.
Summer soccer aspirations In the offseason, Spartans both past and present participate in the National Premier Soccer League
en Pirmann has been involved in the game of soccer in several capacities — as a midfielder for MSU from 2004-08, as an assistant coach at Western Michigan University from 2009-10, and now back at MSU as an assistant coach under head coach Damon Rensing. Outside of his collegiate responsibilities, Pirmann is the head coach of a soccer team based in Detroit, where players hail from colleges across the Midwest and fans wear red uniforms, wave flags, beat drums and cheer vehemently. The Detroit City Football Club or DCFC, is one of five teams in the Great Lakes West Conference in the National Premier Soccer League, a fourth tier soccer federation boasting 78 teams affiliated under the United States Adult
Michigan Stars Football Club midfielder and Michigan State junior midfielder Kyle Rutz, left, bumps fists with Detroit City Football Club midfielder and alumnus Spencer Thompson prior to the match Friday, at Star International Academy athletic field, 6163 Fenton, in Dearborn Heights, Mich. Both Detroit City and the Michigan Stars currently have three former Spartans playing on their roster.
See SOCCER on page 2 u
photos by Danyelle Morrow/The State News
By Omari Sankofa II osankofa@statenews.com The State News
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East Lansing
Amendments strenghten penalties for rental code violations
By Derek Gartee dgartee@statenews.com The State News nn
Landlords in East Lansing now have more clearly defined penalties for violating city rental code per an amendment to the city code passed by the East Lansing City Council on July 8.
C it y of f ic i a l s s a id t he amendments are an attempt to codify the current legal practices, but the amendments also strengthen the existing rental ordinances which have, in some cases, been seen as unconstitutional. The amendments tackle how the city deals with multiple citations. If a person is found
renting without a license, they will receive a fine for each day the property has been illegally rented out. “If you were to just issue a single citation, (landlords) would pay the citation and (continue illegally renting). The profits are so great,” East Lansing City Attorney Tom Yeadon said. “In order to cre-
ate a disincentive we created the daily violations.” With the recent amendments, the cit y now fines landlords up to two times the amount they have gained by illegally renting property. If the city is unable to determine the amount gained, the landlord could be charged up to $1,000 per tenant in the
building. “Most of the time people are honest and we can find a lease,” Yeadon said. “Sometimes (landlords and tenants) aren’t honest and we don’t know how much was made.” With this measure in place, some citizens could be fined without charging rent at all, although Yeadon says those
cases are few and far between. “Most people don’t give away their property. It would be an unusual circumstance.” This type of circumstance was recently brought to East Lansing District Court and exposed some issues with the ordinance. See RENTALS on page 2 u
more inside Common Ground Returns Circa Survive, Squirrel Shaped Fish play during first two days Danyelle Morrow/The State News
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