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Wednesday, Jan. 28
The Indiana Daily Student

The Indiana Daily Student

The Complete Moron's Guide to: World Poetic Forms

Sonnet A 14-line poem that follows a set rhyme scheme and has a logical structure. Sonnets are archetypical of love poetry, and have vivid imagery. Shakespeare's sonnets are among the most famous in English poetry.


The Indiana Daily Student

Chieftains to rock IU with Celtic style

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This Saturday the IU Auditorium will host a large celebration of Celtic tradition that is uncommon to Bloomington. The Chieftains will be going on stage at the IU Auditorium at 8:00 p.m. for their first time in almost 19 years.


The Indiana Daily Student

Mixed Media: SoFA opens MFA show

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If the walls in the School of Fine Arts Gallery could talk, their conversation would clash and resemble the artwork created by MFA printmaker Jeremy Sweet. Sweet has numerous prints in the exhibit "Print Making and Textiles," which is scheduled to open today in the School of Fine Arts Gallery.


The Indiana Daily Student

InMotion hosts dance clinic

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Dancers better get some sleep Friday night because there's a full day of dancing with a top-notch Bloomington company Saturday. InMotion Dance Company is putting on a clinic Saturday unlike any they've done before by offering a full spectrum of dance styles from hip-hop to lyrical, to tap and jazz taught by elite members for dancers of all abilities.

The Indiana Daily Student

Building bridges between cultures

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Several musicians will perform music by Hungarian composers at 5 p.m. Sunday in Ford-Crawford Hall. Bloomington harpist Erzebet Gaal will perform, as will several students from the Jacobs School of Music. The recital is being held to celebrate the Jan. 22 International Day of Hungarian Culture, said Lynn Hooker, assistant professor of Hungarian Studies.



The Indiana Daily Student

Around the Arts

The Trickle Down Effect presents free show at IMU


The Indiana Daily Student

Rethinking Tattoos

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I'd never given body art much thought. It seemed like a dangerous, rigid culture, in which I -- a Catholic-schooled, perpetually optimistic small-town girl -- had no place. As a little girl, when media formed my opinions on essentially everything, I took in the large, inked convicts I saw on "Cops" with wonder and fear. Later, with years of life experience and a media-literate mind, I viewed the "tatted" as interesting, artsy folk with whom I had little in common.


The Indiana Daily Student

ARTiFACTs

What: "Number 11" by American Jackson Pollock 1949. Duco, aluminum and paint on canvas


The Indiana Daily Student

IU folk dancing fosters togetherness, tells stories

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Checking out the Frangipani Room in the Indiana Memorial Union at 7 p.m. Fridays, a passer-by would witness people dancing joyously in a circle to European music. And it wouldn't be out of the ordinary --just another weekly meeting of the IU International Folkdancers.



The Indiana Daily Student

The gift of music

Though Jacobs School of Music student Georgina Joshi was killed in a plane crash last April, her parents hope her memory will live on through a donation to the music school. Louise Addicot and Yatish Joshi of South Bend made a special trip to Hamburg, Germany, in December to select a Steinway concert grand piano in memory of Georgina.



The Indiana Daily Student

This weekend in the Jacobs School of Music

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Chamber music devotees are no doubt looking forward to this weekend's Dubinsky Memorial Concert. The concert, given annually, is piano professor Luba Edlina-Dubinsky's memorial offering to her late husband, Rostislav Dubinsky, who served as violin professor and chamber-music coordinator in the Jacobs School of Music from 1980 until his death in 1997.



The Indiana Daily Student

About face

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Linda Pisano has powdered the nose of Satan himself. In 2005, Pisano, head of costume and design of IU's Department of Theatre and Drama, designed the costumes for a production of Christopher Marlowe's "Doctor Faustus." She transformed the already 6-foot-4 actor playing the devil into a 7-foot-tall bruised corpse with bat-like wings that spanned 12 feet.


The Indiana Daily Student

Reclusive author attends 'Mockingbird' play

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MONTGOMERY, Ala. -- A high-school play based on Harper Lee's classic "To Kill a Mockingbird" brought together black and white high-school students to tell the classic story of racial injustice -- and even drew out the novel's reclusive author.



The Indiana Daily Student

Grow/Move/Change signifies new beginning for modern dance major

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Under the glow of red stage lights, four dancers fluidly moved their bodies to the sounds of Radiohead's "Kid A" to open a program that was anything but traditional. The IU Contemporary Dance Program hosted "Grow/Move/Change," its fall concert, last Thursday and Friday. As promised, it showed the audience an eclectic evening of dance.


The Indiana Daily Student

The art of genitalia: How gender makes you an artist

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In her article "Unfathomable, repellent, delightful" in The Guardian, Iwona Blazwick argues that despite controversy, awards in the arts should be divided into categories distinctly for men and women. She argues that despite its potential sexist and segregating aftereffect, it is necessary in arts competition to divide men and women due to extreme differences in style and the impact feminist art has had on the art world.