Old Gold and Black > 11.07.02 > Arts & Entertainment
The Student Newspaper of Wake Forest University
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Lisa Katerman/Old Gold and Black

Hugh Swaso, a junior at North Carolina School of the Arts, plays violin and junior Jared Cardwell plays guitar and sings for Zephyr, a student band, at Jive 'N Java Oct. 5 in Shorty's.


Student talent saves mediocre 'Cherry Orchard'
By Dana Zelig
Anton Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard opened Nov. 6 on the MainStage Theatre in the Scales Fine Arts Center. To say the show was the most entertaining thing I've seen on campus would be an exaggeration; however, watching it was definitely a learning experience.

Bosstones nothing but mighty
By Valerie Paschall
Outside the night was cold and rainy, and that cold rain was leaking in through the roof of Ziggy's in quite a few places.The smell of stale beer emanated from the venue. Amid all this, however, the Mighty Mighty Bosstones and their fans seemed to be having the time of their lives Nov. 5.

Tuscany Grill's fare only average
By Taylor Kennamer
A word to the wise: most restaurants are overflowing at 6:30 on a Saturday evening. Hungry patrons cower in the doorway, eyes sweeping the dining area for an empty table with the desperation of a ship full of immigrants craning their necks for a glimpse of the Statue of Liberty.

Formal: The most (least) wonderful time of the year
By Brandy Jones
Most people assume that the year is composed of four seasons: spring, summer, fall and winter. Others would argue that there are five seasons. Clearly, you can't exclude hunting season! We are, of course, in the South.

Berkeley delivers chill, refreshing sound
By Hayley Sanders
Longing to find some natural and warmly expressive acoustic music that would inspire the soul, I stumbled across native New Yorker and acoustic modern urban pop-folk artist extraordinare David Berkeley and his recently released debut album The Confluence.

TOOL: The sound and the spectacle
By Krys Mroczkowski
The line began forming at 11 a.m. Nov. 2, and it continued to grow until 7:30 that night. The most fanatical followers were willing to sacrifice an entire day and battle the bitter cold that came after sundown just to get a few feet closer to the phenomenon known as Tool.

Yeah Yeah Yeahs break the mold of 'Garage Rock craze'
By Andrew Bryant
If the United States of America were a high school campus, New York City would be the equivalent of the "cool guy" who rides his Vespa to school and works part-time at the local independently-owned record shop.

 



 


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