Jacobs masters student pioneers new way of constructing horns
Growing up in North Carolina with a French horn player for a father and a clarinet player for a mother, Jacob Medlin’s decision to play an instrument was obvious.
Growing up in North Carolina with a French horn player for a father and a clarinet player for a mother, Jacob Medlin’s decision to play an instrument was obvious.
In a season full of acclaimed Broadway shows, the IU Auditorium will debut the critical and commercial smash hit “Legally Blonde The Musical,” at 8 p.m. Tuesday for the first performance of a two-day run.
As an ardent student of journalism, I say this statement with complete objectivity: Women can do no wrong.
The martini bar located on College Avenue and Fourth Street is anything but a mistake, as its name suggests, though it started out that way.
IU recently made history as the first school in the country to have an endowed chair in ballet. Distinguished Professor of Ballet Violette Verdy was awarded the first Kathy Ziliak Anderson Endowed Chair in Ballet on Oct. 8.
By utilizing this pair of subjects, the Outreach Through the Arts subcommittee of the Environmental Education committee was created to unite arts, conservation and education under one cause.
Paper Crane Gallery, located on West Sixth Street behind Photo Solutions, opened its doors Friday for a grand opening show inspired by monsters.
The first-ever Great Glass Pumpkin Patch took place on the southwest lawn of the Monroe County Courthouse on Saturday.
“Don’t kill yourself, kill the part of yourself that’s all about you” was a message that stuck with junior Adam Johnson on Friday night at the Midwest premiere of “My Suicide.”
The IU’s Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology has been recognized as one of the top programs in the country by the National Research Council.
For Terry LaBolt, musical director for IU’s Department of Theatre and Drama, "Rent" is not just the season opener, it's his reality.
Jace Freeman, an IU alumnus, highlights a community in Haiti attempting to rebuild their lives after the January earthquake in his documentary, “When the Ground Stopped Shaking.”
The room was filled with anticipation as students awaited Mark Strand, Pulitzer Prize winner, former Poet Laureate and the invited speaker for the College Arts and Humanities Institute.
The Sao Paulo City String Quartet will be performing at Auer Hall in the IU Jacobs School of Music on Thursday.
The New Pornographers and My Gold Mask brought energy to the Buskirk-Chumley Theater on Wednesday.
Mark Strand will give a public reading of his work at 5:30 p.m. today in Fine Arts 015. The College Arts and Humanities Institute invited Strand to campus as part of the Solitude series.
In an age where everyone has an iPod and burning a CD is as easy as pie, FM radio does not get the respect it deserves.
Plans to bring the film “My Suicide” to Bloomington was an effort by part-owner of Buffa Louie’s Ed Schwartzman, who lost his son, Ben, to suicide three years to the day of the film premiere on Oct. 15.
The beginning of October marked the start of “Celebrating the Museum,” a year-long event to recognize the contributions and impact of museums within the IU and Bloomington community.
The Trojan Horse was one of the first restaurants I visited as a freshman. I was homesick for good Greek food and, as far as I can tell, it’s still the only Greek restaurant in Bloomington. It sort of drives me nuts.