by Sharon Salmon/A&E Editor in Arts & Entertainment
While Dallas may not be as famous as nearby Austin for its music scene , most music fans would agree that we hold our own. The Big D attracts some of the hottest tickets around, and here's a preview of the bands passing through in September:
by Sharon Salmon/A&E Editor in Arts & Entertainment
The Bath House Cultural Center is featuring a group of exhibits created by six local artists titled Anonymous. The show will run from September 10 to October 1. Curator Sarah Hauser said in a press release, "The word 'Anonymous' implies that a person is involved, but that person is nameless, faceless, unidentified."
by F.S./Movie Reviewer in Arts & Entertainment
The late summer schedule of bad action movies continues into fall with A Sound of Thunder (wide release).
Based on Ray Bradbury's famous 1952 short story illustrating what's come to be called the butterfly effect, the movie's about a group of big-game hunters who use a time-travel device to go back into the past and bag a dinosaur.
From country to cumbias, the airwaves have it
by Sharon Salmon/A&E Editor in Arts & Entertainment
Scouting out the semi-decent tunes on the Dallas radio is an annoying and frustrating process for all of us, but especially for those students who are new in town. Though we can't promise their beats will always be bumping, we can offer a few suggestions.
If classic rock rocks your world, try the Eagle at 97.1 FM or the Bone at 93.3 FM.
by Sharon Salmon/A&E Editor in Arts & Entertainment
Recent University of Dallas graduate Steven Deitchman concluded his education as a sculpture major with a project titled "Just Like This."
Deitchman's exhibit, located outside Haggar near the Capp Bar, features eight separate but related pieces. The table in the center of the exhibit explains the other seven steel sculptures surrounding it.