Five Halloween reads
Book columnist Jenna Fagan gives her five favorite spooky books.
Book columnist Jenna Fagan gives her five favorite spooky books.
Travel columnist Kate Thacker discusses the many different religions found within India.
The Eli Young Band is bringing country to the Bluebird Nightclub tonight.
The Dia de los Muertos altar at the Mathers Museum of World Cultures give guests an opportunity to tribute to the dead.
The Barenaked Ladies made their debut Bloomington performance Tuesday nigh at the IU Auditorium.
Tickets for the show start at $25 for students and $35 for the general public. Tickets can be purchased starting at 10 a.m. Tuesday and until the time of the show at the IU Auditorium Box Office or at iuauditorium.com.
The IU Art Museum is welcoming a collection of puppets from Java that will be on display on the second floor of the Museum in the Gallery of the Art of Asia and the Ancient Western World.
Comedian and filmmaker Bobcat Goldthwait will screen his latest film, “Willow Creek,” at 9:30 p.m. Oct. 31 at the IU Cinema. He will also give a lecture at 3 p.m. Nov. 1 at the cinema.
According to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization, consumers worldwide waste 1.3 billion tons of food every year. Food columnist Amanda Arnold offers a few suggestions as to how to help fight this waste.
Steven Spielberg’s “Schindler’s List” will screen tonight at the IU Cinema.
Orgone, a Los Angeles band dedicated to “heavy, raw, adrenaline-fueled funk and sweat-dripping soul,” according to the Bishop’s website, will perform at 9 p.m. at the Bishop.
The IU Art Museum presented a bonsai tree demonstration and pop-up exhibition last weekend.
Banjo player Béla Fleck has been added to the IU Auditorium fall performance schedule, according to an IU press release.
The Jacobs School of Music will present the “Beethoven Fifth Project: Behind the Score,” an in-depth look at the composer’s fifth symphony.
Fashion columnist Audrey Perkins discusses the surprising ingredient found in red lipsticks.
IU students and members of the IU and Bloomington communities gathered Wednesday in the second floor gallery of the IU Art Museum for another installment of the museum’s popular noon talk series.
Hiroshi Ninomiya of the Tokai University School of Music in Tokyo was at IU Oct. 12 to give a lecture on the origins of contemporary Japanese music.
Three new exhibits based on international jewelry design and collaborations will open from 6 to 8 p.m. Friday at Grunwald Gallery of Art. The openings of “Shift,” “Metal Inkorporated” and “These Moments Existed: Sim Luttin” coincide with a two-day art symposium presented by the Indiana University Metalsmithing & Jewelry Design Guild.
Book columnist Jenna Fagan reviews author Jo Baker’s “Longbourn," an adaptation of one of Austen’s most famous novels, “Pride and Prejudice."
Jacob’s School of Music distinguished professor Violette Verdy has a breadth of experience and knowledge dancers can only hope to gain.