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Thursday, Jan. 29
The Indiana Daily Student

The Indiana Daily Student

‘Big’ topics confronted in ‘Big Love’ production

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Despite what people might think, the play opening Friday at the Wells-Metz Theatre is not about Mormons on HBO, says the play’s director, John Maness. While the HBO TV series is about a man with three wives, Maness’ “Big Love,” by playwright Charles Mee, is based off an ancient Greek tragedy called “The Suppliant Women,” said Maness, a graduate student.


The Indiana Daily Student

ARTiFACTS

What: Dolls made by the Seminole people, U.S.


The Indiana Daily Student

The Shoe Fits

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Prokofiev’s magical ballet “Cinderella” returns to the Musical Arts Center stage this weekend. Making this production even more special is the return of Jacobs School of Music alumni Joseph Morrisey and Christopher Nachtrab, who originated the roles of the Prince and the Jester just two years ago. They are the first alumni to have the honor of being guest artists, so they sat down with the Indiana Daily Student to discuss their returns to Bloomington.


The Indiana Daily Student

BPP’s ‘Empty Sky’ filled with questions

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When playwright Sarah Treem wrote “Empty Sky” she asked herself one question: “What kind of god would ask a father to kill his son?” “I always start writing a play with a question. I want the audience to leave the theater thinking about the questions,” Treem said. Treem’s latest play will cover difficult topics like family, faith and forgiveness. Director Richard Perez said the play covers tough issues that speak to people of all ages.

Courtesy Photo

Vocalist to compete at the Met Sunday

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If Facebook is any standard, Jacobs School of Music graduate student Jamie Barton is already an established celebrity. There are not only one but two groups in her honor: “Jamie Barton is the most popular girl on Facebook,” which claims she has more wall posts and Facebook gifts than anyone, and the noticeably less-flattering “Jamie Barton steals my lunch money,” which accuses Barton of nothing less than being a “bully who kicks puppies and scares freshmen with wedgies and wet willies.”



The Indiana Daily Student

Out of the ashes of war and Holocaust, forgotten music found

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ROME – A waltz. A tango. A piece of jazz. But they weren’t composed in Vienna, Buenos Aires or New Orleans. Scribbled on diaries, loose pages or even toilet paper, these are the notes left behind by people who lived and died in the prisons and concentration camps of World War II.


The Indiana Daily Student

May I have your attention?

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The art world has been shrouded with a dark stigma for a while now over its radical, sometimes too edgy nature. Artists continually push the envelope in dark, sometimes disturbing ways that began during the Dada period in the early 20th century. Perhaps one of the most famous pieces from this period is Marcel Duchamp’s “Fountain,” a found art sculpture of a urinal signed “R. Mutt.” The piece, revered for its drastic existential questioning on the basis and standards of art, can be found as a replica in IU’s own art museum. Artists continued in Duchamp’s steps to create new forms of art that have brought on serious questioning on the status of art. Were the artists creating personal meaning, or were they merely craving attention?


The Indiana Daily Student

WFIU hosts ‘This American Life’ advance screening

The televised version of the public-radio hit “This American Life” will be shown 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Radio and Television Building room 251. The event is free and open to the public, and is sponsored by WFIU and the Indiana Daily Student. “This American Life” follows host Ira Glass as he travels around the country for six months. Some of his encounters include Iowa pig farms, a first-time filmmaker in California and a hot-dog stand in Illinois.


The Indiana Daily Student

ONLINE ONLY: Legendary Toots and Maytals at Bluebird tonight

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The casual reggae fan knows of Bob Marley, but for more than 40 years Toots and the Maytals have spanned all Jamaican styles and genres from ska to rock-steady in their unique blend of reggae. Most well known for “54-46 that’s my number” and “Pressure Drop” the band reached new acclaim for their compilation album where they collaborated with Eric Clapton, Trey Anastacio, Jeff Beck and Keith Richards among others.


The Indiana Daily Student

New exhibit inspired by Romanian propaganda featured at SoFA Library

More than 35 pieces of art will be on display this week in the IU Fine Arts Library Foyer. The exhibit, titled “Romania Redrawn,” features art based on old propaganda photos set out for disposal outside of the Romanian consulate in New York. Romanian artist Irina Hasnas Pascal found the photos and invited other artists to create works inspired by them.


The Indiana Daily Student

Retro and futuristic war-inspired looks open L.A. Fashion Week

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CULVER CITY, Calif. – Military-inspired collections that looked back and to the future opened L.A. Fashion Week, with Collection bebe offering edgy space-age designs, and Dina Bar-El showing clothes that dripped 1940s glamour. Their runway presentations Sunday helped launch the first of five days of fall fashion shows.


The Indiana Daily Student

Iranians outraged over box office hit movie ‘300’

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TEHRAN, Iran – The hit American movie “300” has angered Iranians who say the Greeks-vs.-Persians action flick insults their ancient culture and provokes animosity against Iran. “Hollywood declares war on Iranians,” blared a headline in Tuesday’s edition of the independent Ayende-No newspaper.



Congress Arts

Congress holds hearing on funding for arts

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WASHINGTON – Jazz musician Wynton Marsalis, actor Chris Klein and Black Entertainment Television co-founder Sheila Johnson pressed Congress on March 13 to restore funding for the arts to levels from 15 years ago – before those funds were slashed.



The Indiana Daily Student

What’s in a size? A lot.

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In the 1950s, Marilyn Monroe was considered one of the sexiest women in existence. Not only was she glamorous, but she had that find-an-air-vent-and-pose thing totally down. She also had a classic beauty mark that puts Cindy Crawford’s to shame. (That’s not really true. To be honest, I’ve never had beauty mark preferences and I don’t plan on starting now.) She married a host of hotties and even got to sing a steamy version of “Happy Birthday, Mr. President” to our nation’s most erotic president, John F. Kennedy. (Yum.)


The Indiana Daily Student

The Complete Moron's Guide to: Mexican Arts and Entertainment

For those lucky enough to be spending spring break in Cancun, Puerto Vallarta, Cabo San Lucas or any other Mexican beach destination make sure to check out the local culture. Mexico boasts a rich cultural background aside from beautiful shores crowded with college students. So if you need to take a break from baking in the sun, check out some other Mexican hot-spots.


The Indiana Daily Student

Obi-Wan’s brown cloak sells for $104,000 to phone bidder at auction

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LONDON –The brown hooded cloak worn by Obi-Wan Kenobi in the “Star Wars” films – and then forgotten for years in a warehouse – sold for $104,000 to an anonymous telephone bidder Tuesday at an auction of movie and TV memorabilia. Audience members raised their paddles in rapid succession as costumes flashed across TV screens at Bonhams, a British auctioneer, as staff fielded phone bids from all over the world. When the hammer dropped on a Bond girl’s cat-suit or Anthony Hopkins’ army uniform, men in dark blazers whispered the prices into their cell phones.


The Indiana Daily Student

Comic-book hero Captain America dies on the page

NEW YORK – Captain America has undertaken his last mission – at least for now. The venerable superhero is killed in the issue of his namesake comic that hit stands Wednesday, the New York Daily News reported. On the new edition’s pages, a sniper shoots down the shield-wielding hero as he leaves a courthouse. It ends a long run for the stars-and-stripes-wearing character, created in 1941. Over the years, some 210 million copies of Captain America comic books, published by New York-based Marvel Entertainment Inc., have been sold in 75 countries. But resurrections are not unknown in the world of comics, and Marvel Entertainment Editor in Chief Joe Quesada said a Captain America comeback wasn’t impossible.