Volume II, Issue 11
September 8 - September 14, 1998
LETTER FROM THE EDITOR:
hings are a bit thin this week in Arts & Leisure, but don't
let that scare you off. The real scare is in the coaching tactics
of the past and their increasing conflict with the players of
today. Read about it in "New-Breed Coaches." Then take a trip through some current sporting news with "Coach's Corner."
Rounding out things, take a trip to Ireland to teach dance in Northern Ireland. In the center of violence, Annie Bunker uses
her art to work with the disabled. The trip gave Bunker a real
sense of the history of the troubled land.

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Some Assembly Required [6]
Three artists create uncommon constructions at Site 2121.
Jeffrey Lee, WEEKLY ALIBI
Now What? [7]
A gallery of captivating links to keep your imagination churning while the paint dries.
WEEKLY WIRE
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New-Breed Coaches [2]
Football players have changed dramatically over the last two decades as coaches rush to keep up.
Dennis Freeland, MEMPHIS FLYER
Coach's Corner [3]
Verbal circumlocution, quite possibly about sports, brought to you weekly.
Andy "Coach" Cotton, AUSTIN CHRONICLE

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Dance Against Destruction [4]
This past summer, Orts Theatre Of Dance director Annie Bunker taught dance to Northern Ireland's disabled, elderly and blind.
Margaret Regan, TUCSON WEEKLY
Island Paradise [5]
There's only one word for Borderland Theatre's first musical: stunning.
Dave Irwin, TUCSON WEEKLY
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