Friday, April 26, 2024

Tyler Sipe

Recent Articles

FEATURES

Dancing provides stripper cash-flow, entertainment

The only clothing remaining on Justin Guttridge is a modest thong. The Grand Ledge native thrusts his pelvis and shakes his butt, hoping he will be able to court some money for his striptease. Women and men begin to scream and yell as Guttridge performs a highly erotic dance of sensual moves. Daring customers sprawl out on the hardwood floor with money clinging from their teeth at Club X-Cel, 224 S.

FEATURES

Large veins end students' piercing dreams

Getting his tongue pierced was Cliff Sims' original plan Tuesday, but piercer Kevin Tarbell ended Sims' hopes of getting something he thought would be "making a statement." The Olivet College physical education freshman came to Splash of Color, 515 E.

MSU

Alumnus to donate tree; add beauty, shade to campus grounds

When 1962 MSU alumnus Peter Secchia read an article last year about students donating a tree to the university, it made him reminisce about his days on campus. Secchia, a financial contributor to the Student Academic Center and the new addition to Breslin Students Event Center, thought it would be fitting to donate a tree on Arbor Day. Secchia, chairman of Universal Forest Products Inc. in Grand Rapids, and others will be planting a 20-foot autumn blaze maple tree at 10:30 a.m.

MSU

Handbook dispels generational myths

All year long,marketing freshman Matt Horton has been spending about six to eight hours a week on a Student Service Learning Project for his American Thought and Language class, “Writing: Public Life in America.”Horton and his peers from ATL will be honored for work they completed in a handbook to be published this fall, titled “Generation Y Speaks Out, A Public Policy Guide.” The event will take place from 3 p.m to 5 p.m.

MSU

Program offers tours to experience cultures

A few MSU staff and faculty members took it upon themselves Tuesday to spend their lunch in the Kresge Art Museum, taking in original art pieces by undergraduate students. The self-guided tour was held for free in a program called Sharing Art and Cultural Events on Campus, sponsored by the Women’s Resource Center.

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