Staff Pick
-
A documentary that looks at the life and works of the great Hoosier Impressionist.
Before you watch the documentary join the IU Public Art and Cultural Heritage Collection and Indiana State Museum and Historic Sites for the opening of their collaborative exhibit that celebrates the life and work of Hoosier artist, T.C. Steele. Today, April 17th, at 4 PM!
-
Four Democrats are competing for the party’s nomination in Indiana’s 9th Congressional District and the chance to face Republican incumbent Erin Houchin in the fall.
-
WTIU’s Major Taylor: Champion of the Race has been nominated for a National News & Documentary Emmy Award, highlighting the power of local storytelling on a national stage.
Alex Chambers talks with composer Gabriel Jenks about bluegrass, Schoenberg, and long drives to harp lessons.
-
Each winter, when the weather gets cold enough, the Veal family pumps water onto layers of brush in their yard to form a massive ice tree that can climb as high as 80 feet tall.
-
Purdue President Winthrop Stone accepted personal responsibility for reforming not only academics, but also students' moral character.
-
Bloomington-based poet Tony Brewer reads from his manuscript Musical Chairs in the Dark: “Wash My Feet,” “Electors,” “Big Red Jupiter Storm Spot,” and “Forever Home.”
-
How can educators use AI thoughtfully without losing what matters most in teaching and learning?
-
Humans share a large percentage of DNA with monkeys and apes. What really separates us from our closest living genetic relatives?
-
A show dedicated to interpretations of the many classics that entered the American Songbook via Frank Loesser's Guys and Dolls.
-
The Liber de natura rerum, c. 1240, by Thomas de Cantimpré/Bibliothèque Municipale de ValenciennesWe’re exploring the sounds of our musical bird friends. Hold on to your cats and open your windows as we listen to music inspired by the cuckoo, a bird whose simple call has been recognized as the onset of spring and summer from the medieval period onwards. This summery bird’s unusual behaviors are also the subject of songs about human relationships.
-
In the 1940s a young jazz singer with a four-octave range and bebop chops burst onto the big-band scene with Earl Hines and Billy Eckstine before going on to establish herself as a solo star.
More
-
A federal judge in Indianapolis dismissed the case last month.
-
The change would have altered the agreement so that 100 percent of excess revenue would be returned to the county, instead of 25 percent.
-
Hunters and trappers could kill 400 bobcats annually under proposed rule
-
Some land considered part of Bloomington’s convention center campus will soon be owned by the Capital Improvement Board.
-
Braun mostly echoes Trump’s GOP primary picks in redistricting vote fallout
-
Civic groups say the votes of naturalized Hoosiers could be at risk amid the state’s election integrity campaign targeting those with temporary credential numbers in their voter registrations.
-
The Bloomington Police Department isn’t shutting the cameras off immediately. The city is moving to a transition period during which Flock data will only be accessible to the BPD.
-
A novice gardener once told me that she was only going to plant perennials, as they did not need any care. If only that was true!
-
Astronaut Virgil "Gus" Grissom, who grew up in tiny Mitchell, Indiana, and went on to become one of NASA's first astronauts, and was slated to become one of the first astronauts to land on the moon.
-
Union schools to enroll students as legal battle continues