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Photo
courtesy of Bill Ray III
'Orchard'
to bloom
By Valerie Paschall
Amidst the pre-revolutionary fervor of turn-of-the-century Russia, a woman
faces the loss of property her family has owned for generations and the
changes that will inevitably result. Sounds like a comedy, doesn't it?
Pavement:
One 'Enchanted' album
By Andrew Bryant
I can
find nothing new and interesting to add to the previous 10 years of praise
heaped upon Pavement's debut, the recently re-released Slanted and Enchanted:
Luxe and Reduxe.
'Jack'
thrills, terrifies
By
Sarah Leer
Gutted. Ripped open. Slashed and splayed. Prostitutes stalked in Whitechapel,
London and viciously murdered. No, this is not a description of a new
slasher flick from Wes Craven out just in time for Halloween. These
crimes are at the heart of the case of Jack the Ripper, a London serial
killer in the late 19th century, and are the basis of Jack, a one-man
show by Michael Huie.
'Sex
and the Campus:' Playing the game of love
By Brandy Jones
I've
found that lots of couples end relationships -- or avoid them altogether
--because of all the games that one or both people play. Just the
other day, one of my friends broke up with her boyfriend because he
liked to play the "I'm not jealous, but I'll beat up any guy who looks
at you" game.
'Oblivious'
energizes TNN
By Ryan Eanes
In recent days many cable networks have tried to "reinvent" themselves,
reemerging with new graphics, new programming schedules and modified,
if not more than a little familiar, philosophies concerning programming.
Can
Beck's 'Sea Change' salvage rock 'n' roll?
By Chris Chase
Rock and roll is dead -- at least commercially. Creed is the biggest
selling rock band in the world; the Strokes are being hailed as innovators
for ripping off the British punk sound that originated when they were
still in diapers; and some band named Puddle of Mudd is having runaway
success with a song entitled "She Hates Me."
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