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Sunday, February 26, 2006

Triad of talent
By SETH ASHLEY of the Tribune’s staff 
Many college towns in America likely possess a disproportionate amount of artistic talent in their residents. Academia tends to attract those who thrive on cultural richness, and that richness seems to beget even more richness.

NICHE: A WEEKLY PEEK AT AN EMERGING ARTIST
Bob Hartzell

By SETH ASHLEY of the Tribune’s staff
As a designer of concert posters, Bob Hartzell never spent much time explaining his artistic concepts or justifying their execution. Rock bands and concert promoters don’t really care whether you’re mixing a classical ideal with a postmodern interpretation. They just want it to look cool.

BEHIND THE SCENES
Film institute at Stephens puts women in the picture

By LYNN ISRAEL of the Tribune’s staff
Amid all the well-deserved hoopla surrounding the True/False Film Festival and the Oscars, consider another film-related tremor that has the potential to rattle Hollywood’s male-dominated world.

RHYME AND REASON

Rocker to go on trial

Comedy for sale

Peter Jennings remembered

PERFORMING ARTS

LIFTING THE CURTAIN
Hello, Dolly!

ON STAGE

MUSIC

New Orleans noted
By ERIC TALMADGE of The Associated Press
YOKOHAMA, Japan - Wynton Marsalis was halfway through an explanation of whether he thinks his hometown, New Orleans, will ever really come back from the devastation of Hurricane Katrina when he stopped and shifted direction. 

LIVE MUSIC

BOOKS

COVER TO COVER
“You’ll Never Nanny in This Town Again: The True Adventures of a Hollywood Nanny” by Suzanne Hansen (Crown Publishers, 289 pages)

By PATTI THORN of Scripps Howard News Service
As a trashaholic, I found it hard to resist a book such as "You’ll Never Nanny In This Town Again: The True Adventures of a Hollywood Nanny."

LITERARY LINKS

BEST SELLERS

VISUAL ARTS

DOWNEY'S FINE LINE
Censorship for kids’ sake bottoms out art, society

By JAMES DOWNEY
"It’s for the good of the children."

EXHIBITS

 

 

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Copyright © 2006 The Columbia Daily Tribune. All Rights Reserved.

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