Ceremony contains traditions, changes
In 1830, a small class of nearly half a dozen students received the very first degrees from IU. One hundred eighty-one years later, things have changed in some big ways.
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In 1830, a small class of nearly half a dozen students received the very first degrees from IU. One hundred eighty-one years later, things have changed in some big ways.
President of the Alpha Tau Omega Alumni Board Kent Miller and other sources have confirmed IU’s chapter of ATO will lease their house to IU’s chapter of Delta Chi for the 2010-11 academic year.
President Michael McRobbie, Provost Karen Hanson and Vice President for Information Technology Brad Wheeler spoke at the groundbreaking ceremony Thursday for IU’s new Cyberinfrastructure building.
When it comes time to find a Little 5 artist, the Union Board knows it’s in for a bit of a tough ride. “The search is a little nerve-wracking,” said junior James Still, the Union Board director for concerts.
With 26 competitors from around the world, the Jacobs School of Music has completed its first annual Guitar Festival and Competition by announcing not one first-place winner, but two.
After several months of financial turmoil and negotiations, the City has formally announced its decision to take ownership of the John Waldron Arts Center. The decision will become effective March 31.
Indiana University once again proved its music program is among the best in the country when three Jacobs School of Music students received honors at the Metropolitan Opera National Council Tri-State Auditions.
The performance Saturday on the stage of the MAC was the annual Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions for the Indiana District. The auditions, which occur annually in 15 regions of the United States and Canada, included 23 total performers who sang one to five arias in their respective voice parts.
In an attempt to bring audience feedback to life on stage, the Bloomington Playwrights Project will have their final staged reading for the BloomingPlays Development Series from 11 a.m. to 3:45 p.m. Saturday and noon to 4:30 p.m. Sunday.
From a handmade sock doll named Pickles to various prints and paintings, the School of Fine Arts Gallery auctioned off a variety of artwork Friday for the Silent Night Holiday Art Sale and Auction.
It’s Tuesday afternoon, and the Henry Radford Hope School of Fine Art gallery is going through a transition. Ladders and construction tools are scattered on the floor of the west gallery, while the first pieces of art are mounted on the center gallery walls.
Although Tina Newberry, associate professor in the Henry Radford Hope School of Fine Arts, has been teaching at IU for three years, Friday was the first time she saw any of her students’ work displayed in the school’s gallery. Those students are the 21 undergraduates enrolled in Newberry’s painting seminar this fall, and their paintings are hung in the SoFA’s center and west gallery for the BFA Painting Exhibition. The exhibition, as well as the School’s Overseas Study Exhibition, opened Tuesday and ended Saturday.
As the cold weather rolls in, students and faculty in the Henry Radford Hope School of Fine Arts are finding ways to warm up and appreciate the artwork created during this fall semester.
Joanne Woodward and the late Paul Newman’s influences as renowned, established actors will be felt next year when the Bloomington Playwrights Project presents the first Woodward/Newman Drama Award, which will be given for the best dramatic play from submissions sent to the theater company.
For sophomore Marine Tempels, art refreshes environmental activism.
With a $600 scholarship on the line, four graduate students presented research lectures Sunday in front of an intimate crowd and a four-judge panel for the biennial Evan F. Lilly Memorial Lecture Competition.
Haitian art was focus of IU Art Museum’s Noon Talk Series on Thursday.
Created in 2002 by a group of Fine Arts students, Fuller Projects is home to semi-monthly gallery shows featuring contemporary art in any medium. The gallery’s first November show is titled “5 Obstructions” and opens at 8 p.m. Friday.
A small, intimate audience went to see “Tick, Tick ... BOOM!” a contemporary rock musical written by Jonathan Larson on Thursday at the John Waldron Arts Center.
Before he wrote the musical “Rent,” a Broadway hit that won the Tony Award for Best Musical in 1996, composer and playwright Jonathan Larson produced and acted in his own one-man show, “Tick, Tick ... BOOM!”