Category: Arts & Entertainment

  • Television shows to look out for this fall

    Dominic Piacenti A&E Senior Staff Writer Summer is ending, and that means one thing — our favorite television shows are returning. While we can look forward to shows like “How I Met Your Mother” and “Fringe,” we will mourn the loss of TV classics (it seems that after ten years , people finally stopped watching…

  • Breaking Bad halfway through gripping final season

    Travis Marmon Sports Editor WARNING: PLOT SPOLIERS On Sept. 2, AMC’s Breaking Bad wrapped up the first eight episodes of its final season, and with them continued to cement its legacy as one of the greatest television shows in history. It is the first season in which former schoolteacher Walter White has been shown to…

  • The scene: Disney

    There’s always time for Disney Brooke Skiba Now that we’re all in college, and technically adults, how many of us still enjoy watching the classic Disney movies? I would imagine that many of us do, even if we won’t always openly admit it. The problem in college seems not to be lack of interest, just…

  • Students cover their favorite songs at the UG

    Students cover their favorite songs at the UG

    Libba Smith A&E Editor Sometimes, the pounding emanating from the UG isn’t the latest Black Eyed Peas song for a Friday night dance party; rather, it is the sound of students making their own music. Covers, a Wooster tradition for several years now, showcases the musical abilities of the Scots, as it gives students the…

  • First-years wow audience at Woo Idol

    First-years wow audience at Woo Idol

    Libba Smith A&E Editor We all know that Wooster is brimming with talent, and this year’s first-year class is no exception. From spoken word poetry to tap dancing and plenty of songs in between, Woo Idol, the annual first-year talent show put on by the Orientation Committee, highlighted the creative abilities of Wooster’s newest students.…

  • The Scene: Kids books rule

    The first two books I ever read on my own were works of great literature. They were, in no particular order, “Hop On Pop” and “One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish.” I was around four years old. Though I’ve slowed to a rather less “devoted” pace as a reader in more recent years,…