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Thursday, May 2
The Indiana Daily Student

The Indiana Daily Student

Jazz artist Joshua Redman returns to Bloomington

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Many lives were tragically affected Sept. 11 becaue of the consequences of the day's terrorist attacks. One such life affected was 32-year-old saxophonist Joshua Redman. As one of the most acclaimed young artists in jazz, Redman was booked to play at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater in Bloomington the night of Sept. 11. Because of the day's events, the performance was cancelled so Redman and his band members could check on their family and friends in New York City. Redman's entire tour was crippled because of the terrorist attacks, but he is returning to the Buskirk-Chumley Saturday.


The Indiana Daily Student

'AntigonE' relays modern message

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As the world fights religious fanatics with misconstrued perceptions of sacred texts, a small ensemble in a tiny theater portrays a post-apocalyptic religious group led by its own misconceptions of sacred truths. Religious leaders potentially have the power to mold the minds of millions with their own interpretations of religious texts. They can deem what is right and what is wrong and more importantly, what is truth and what is not.


The Indiana Daily Student

Award-winning costume designer to visit campus

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Milanka Berberovic's work neglects the ordinary. An internationally recognized Yugoslavian costume designer, she creates costumes that are at once brilliant, distinct, vivid and sensual. Although her costumes are wildly modern and highly fashionable, Berberovic herself could easily be mistaken for someone's grandma. She emanates gentleness, baked goods and worldly wisdom. She has received many prestigious awards, including a Prague Quadrennial gold award -- one of only 10 awarded throughout history.


The Indiana Daily Student

Ceremony to honor professor

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Tonight at 7 p.m. in Auer Hall in the School of Music Library, the late distinguished professor of violin, Franco Gulli, will be remembered and honored by his colleagues and students in a memorial concert. The concert, serving both as a tribute and a farewell to the late professor, will bring family, friends, students, alumni and IU Music Faculty together to play the music that Gulli loved.

The Indiana Daily Student

Professor looks at history of medieval attire

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Tales of chivalrous knights and lovely heroines found in the texts of French medieval literature reveal much about court culture, but professor E. Jane Burns is not interested in what these characters are doing. She's interested in what they are wearing.


The Indiana Daily Student

Man of many talents

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He has written screenplays, played in a rock band and acted in plays. From author to actor to musician, Paul McComas has experienced a little bit of everything during his 20s. But his strongest passion has always been writing. When he turned 30, McComas realized he was spreading himself too thin and decided to focus on one area, fiction writing.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Little Women' makes local debut

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This weekend will mark the collegiate debut of a new spin on a classic work of American literature. Louisa May Alcott's "Little Women" will be performed on stage at the Musical Arts Center in an opera production composed by Mark Adamo.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Ragtime' wows Auditorium audience

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\"Beggar and millionaire, everyone everywhere was moving to that ragtime." This line from the opening number of the musical "Ragtime" sums up a great deal about the show. Not only does the play follow the lives of three segregated groups at the beginning of the 20th Century, but it also describes the audience reaction to the night's performance.


The Indiana Daily Student

Play premiers at Waldron

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What if you were a painter and suddenly found yourself unable to paint? That's what Alex suffers in "Sunflower and Blue," opening this weekend at the John Waldron Arts Center.



The Indiana Daily Student

Med student debuts show

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To one of his fellow classmates, Adam Fisch might appear to be just another second-year medical student, but to the theater community, he is much more. Fisch, a playwright who received his undergraduate degree at the University of Pennsylvania, is currently preparing for the opening of his play. "Sunflower and Blue," which took more than two years to write, will be performed Jan. 25 and 26 at the John Waldron Arts Center.


The Indiana Daily Student

Discover the virtues of broccoli

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When the winter holidays come to a close and icy streets are bare of twinkling lights and festive adornments, the harried modern person looks at their New Year\'s resolutions to eat light, healthy foods like someone strapped into a dentist's chair, contemplating a triple root canal.


The Indiana Daily Student

Vocal ensembles unite for holiday

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For IU Professor of Music Edmund Cord, tonight's Martin Luther King Holiday Celebration concert will put King's message of global togetherness into song. "It's an opportunity for us as artists to make a positive statement about our shared values and humanity," said Cord, who is also director of the IU Brass Choir. "Music has been said to have the power to express the inexpressible. To be a part of this concert is a great opportunity."


The Indiana Daily Student

Local a cappella groups featured on CD

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IU's Straight No Chaser and Ladies First will be featured on a CD that showcases the best of collegiate a cappella. The CD, which will be released at the end of this month, will feature songs from the University of Wisconsin, University of Michigan and University of Pennsylvania. The CD, Best of Collegiate A Cappella (BOCA), has been produced since 1995, and until 2000 it featured the upper echelon of only American collegiate a cappella. Since 2000, other countries, such as Japan, UK and Canada, were considered and chosen for the album, as well. The CD is produced by Varsity Vocals -- the scholastic branch of Mainely A Cappella, a company that releases the world's largest a cappella mail order catalogue. Varsity Vocals is in charge of putting out the BOCA CD and playing host to a cappella competitions at both the high school and collegiate levels.


The Indiana Daily Student

A taste of summer in December

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I am rarely ready to relinquish warm weather. I shiver over the grill for a few more barbecues, crank up the heat so I can sit around in shorts, or, alternatively, swath myself in fleece to relish my freezer's final Popsicles. So despite my yearnings for hearty stews and casseroles to ward off the evening chill, this warm weather spell has me sneaking tastes of summer into my December evening meals. My favorite fragrant reminder is cilantro.


The Indiana Daily Student

'The quiet Beatle' loses battle with cancer at 58

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Former Beatles guitarist George Harrison died in Los Angeles Thursday at the age of 58. He died with his wife, Olivia, and his son, Dhani, at his side. He suffered from lung and throat cancer. He was also nearly murdered in 1999 by a fan, contributing to the decline of his health.


The Indiana Daily Student

Waldron art sale brings holiday cheer

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The John Waldron Arts Center, 122 S. Walnut St., celebrated the beginning of the holiday season last week with the opening of its Winterfest Holiday Art Sale, currently presented in the center's galleries. The event, featuring work from local artists, is a fundraiser for the Bloomington Area Arts Council, which runs the center.


The Indiana Daily Student

Tradition at its best

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It's that time of year again: crowded shopping malls, last minute gift purchases, countless holiday parties, numbingly cold weather and every students favorite -- final exams. With all of these December duties, it's sometimes hard to enjoy the holiday season. But the IU Ballet Theater's production of "The Nutcracker" is a holiday tradition that might alleviate those dull winter blues.


The Indiana Daily Student

Kids, adults take flights of fancy

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Light spills out into the darkening streets from the basement windows of the John Waldron Arts Center. One glance inside reveals a flurry of activity -- a stark contrast to the empty sidewalks. Inside, a woman holds an apple-green, newly glazed pot into the air. She discusses the pottery with a man who examines it and points to specific details. Several people dart around the room, gathering the remnants of their work. Class at the John Waldron Arts Center, 122 S. Walnut St., comes to a close as the day ends.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Precarious Moments' turns 'junk' into artwork

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Associate Professor Tim Mather bestows aesthetic beauty upon abstract "stuff," as he calls it -- objects common in our daily lives, sometimes referred to as "junk." In the School of Fine Arts Gallery, Mather\'s exhibition \"Precarious Moments\" will let visitors look at that "junk" in a new light.