Saturday, December 6, 2025

Take a peek behind the curtain and test drive the NEW StateNews.com today!

Features

FEATURES

Atom plays local house

East Lansing resident Lisa Bennett has been listening to the Philadelphia-based one-man band Atom and His Package for more than two years and has even traveled to Arkansas to see him perform. But Bennett didn’t have to travel very far for her third Atom and His Package concert Monday night. Multi-talented Adam Goren made his third visit to East Lansing on Monday, supporting his new album by playing at a local house party. “I’m really glad he’s out there being a guiding light for fun-loving nerds out there,” Bennett said. Goren performs with his guitar and his “package,” a music sequencer, from which most of his backup music is produced.

FEATURES

Ledgers A Knights Tale entertaining, predictable

Teen-age time-period jousting movies aren’t exactly a big draw at the box office. If “A Knight’s Tale” is any reflection on this subgenre of movies, it isn’t a very good one. It’s not that “A Knight’s Tale” isn’t entertaining, it’s just that the film doesn’t have the spark to completely captivate an audience for two hours. Heath Ledger (“The Patriot,” “10 Things I Hate About You”) plays the main character, William Thatcher.

FEATURES

Freedom festival to prove activism can be fun

The MSU Freedom Festival 2001 will commence at the rock on Farm Lane at noon Saturday, meshing student activism, music and offerings for an all-around good time. Aaron Allen, MSU American Civil Liberties Union chapter president, said the event, which will run from noon to 5 p.m., is meant to present the idea that activism can be fun, while offering opportunities for student activist groups to collaborate and hand out literature. “Throughout the years, we’ve stood up against many things,” said Allen, whose ACLU chapter focuses primarily on students’ rights.

FEATURES

Classic Steinbeck tale comes to local stage

Steinbeck’s classic drama “Of Mice and Men” will open in the Arena Theatre, in the basement of the Auditorium, on Saturday and tell the tale of two traveling workers during the Depression. “It’s about the value of being alone versus the value of being with someone,” said Director Dave Goss, who completes his master of arts degree this semester.

FEATURES

Accafellas bring music to U

Tonight, MSU students will have their chance to experience an a cappella group that prides itself on musical diversity. “We’re always trying not to be like the typical college a cappella group,” said psychology junior Caleb Sandoval, financial officer of the Accafellas, an MSU men’s a cappella group.

FEATURES

Weekend Guide

Friday: The Ten Pound Fiddle Coffeehouse presents “Residents’ Night” at 8 p.m.

FEATURES

Seniors spend thier final days of college enjoying time with friends

For graduating seniors, the clock is winding down on another phase of life. Up until this point, life’s milestones have been measured mostly in connection with education.There’s the first day of kindergarten when scared 5-year-olds hop on the yellow bus for the first time, middle school graduation when hormonal 14-year-olds prepare to move on to ninth grade and high school graduation, when excited 18-year-olds grip their diploma and prepare to move on to college or full-time work.And now, for many of MSU’s seniors, next week’s commencement will be the last time they walk across the stage in cap and gown, some crying, some smiling, some just plain shocked to have made it there - four, five or six years and thousands of dollars after that first night in the MSU dorms when it still felt a little surreal.After this, notches in life’s bedpost will be made not by diplomas and proms, but by marriages and babies and grandbabies and job promotions and everything else that goes along with “grown-up” life.But before heading off to face the world with its internships and full-time jobs, graduating seniors will take a break and spend time doing what they do best - partying.It is, after all, a time to celebrate.“This huge goal has been accomplished - it’s a big weight off my shoulders,” parks and recreation senior Sarah Bradley said.

FEATURES

Smith directs famous duos last hurrah

Kevin Smith has always been a fanboy.In the writer/director’s 1994 “Clerks,” he wore it like a badge while Dante and Randal argued over which “Star Wars” sequel is better.Now, the man known as Silent Bob on the other side of the camera, will end the debate.

FEATURES

Ancient practice of Kama Sutra offers more than meets the eye

Two thousand or so years ago, Mallanaga Vatsyayana, an Indian scholar, penned one of the world’s first self-help sex manuals, advising couples on how, with whom and under what circumstances sex should be performed.Today, “The Kama Sutra of Vatsyayana” rests on bookshelves and tabletops all over America, serving as an instruction manual for modern-day couples that learn from and experiment with its frank descriptions of dozens of sexual positions, breathing techniques and erotic sounds.“‘The Kama Sutra’ kind of celebrates and helps people reflect on the joy and the beauty - and I guess the limberness and the flexibility - of sex,” said Howard Ruppel, chancellor and academic dean of The Institute for Advanced Study of Human Sexuality in San Francisco.

FEATURES

Former Doors guitarist comes to Michigan

Robby Krieger remembered wanting to write something for the Doors in 1967 that, as Jim Morrison put it, was “universal in nature.” “I figured it should be something heavy duty and something that would have the same meaning 30 years from then,” Krieger said. “So I figured I’d write about one of the four elements - I picked fire.” Thirty years later, “Light My Fire” is one of the best-known songs the Doors ever did, thanks to the mind of Krieger. The former Doors guitarist will be performing with his current band, the Robby Krieger Organization, on Saturday at The Magic Bag in Ferndale, Mich.

FEATURES

Wharton previews fall, spring lineup

The list of East Lansing’s theatrical mix for the 2001-02 season is out. “We goosed the list up, and now everyone is saying ‘Wow,’” said Marcus Olson, head of acting at MSU. This fall, “Suburbia,” an edgy comedy/drama about suburban kids on the brink, and Shakespeare’s “Hamlet” will grace Wharton Center’s Pasant Theatre stage, while the spring will offer the MSU Repertory Dance Company Concert and the musical “Hair.” The variety is pleasing to theater junior Mike McKeogh, who looks forward to trying out for any of the text-rich parts in “Hamlet.” “There’s a total difference and variety in the shows this year,” he said.

FEATURES

Band to play for theater funds

Theater sophomore Mike Ransbottom had a little trouble April 14 when his band recorded in a studio at Central Michigan University. “At first it was rough because it’s a completely different vibe in a studio,” the bass player of Mason’s Case said.

FEATURES

Group proves to be all for the people

Manic Street Preachers Know Your Enemy (Virgin Records) The latest collection from the most legendary of the UK’s contemporary rock acts have proven themselves to still be a reckoning force in music gurus’ heads. “Found That Soul” is a droning craftwork of fuzz guitars and vocals straight from the heart.

FEATURES

Run DMC returns with help from music world

Run DMC Crown Royal (Arista) Carlos Santana’s 1999 album, “Supernatural,” was so full of cameos by more than a dozen artists you had to keep reminding yourself it was actually Santana playing guitar in there somewhere. Collaborations with artists such as Lauryn Hill, Wyclef Jean and Rob Thomas gave the album a new, unique sound that won Santana eight Grammy Awards. In this way, Run DMC has a lot to look forward to. The group’s new release, “Crown Royal,” is filled with big names such as Everlast, Kid Rock and Method Man. The first - and one of the best - songs from the album, “It’s Over,” featuring Jermaine Dupri, also highlights Run DMC and Jam Master Jay reminiscing together about the journey the group has made from its first album in 1984 to this, its seventh, more than 15 years later. And the group let everyone know how much progress it’s made: “Let me let you all know something/The first rap group to get on MTV/and then they gonna turn around and resurrect Aerosmith/If it weren’t for these cats, you all wouldn’t know nothing about no LL Cool J or Beastie Boys.” In fact, Run DMC is so secure in the fact that it has influenced dozens of rock/rap groups of today, that they continue bragging about it in the following songs, such as the title track “Crown Royal.” But the album starts to go in a different direction with Fred Durst’s appearance on “Them Girls” and “The School of Old,” featuring Kid Rock.

FEATURES

Hall-of-famer comes to U

Jerry “The Iceman” Butler was anything but cold Thursday afternoon as he mingled with MSU faculty and staff outside 191 Communication Arts and Sciences Building.The 61-year-old rhythm and blues icon, best known for the song “Moon River,” spoke of his accomplishments with warmth, wearing a dark suit and a wide smile.In 1958, Butler formed a group called the Impressions with R&B legend Curtis Mayfield.“In 1959, I went solo,” he said.