Staff Pick
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White Violet Center for Eco-Justice produces intricate woven goods from alpaca wool and dye made from flowers. While it may sound romantic and old-fashioned, it isn't easy—nor is it without purpose.
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IU maintained $118 million in budget cuts to compensate for the loss last year of some state and federal funding. It made up part of the loss by using more funds from the IU Foundation and revenue from athletics.
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WTIU and the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music have received a Regional Emmy® nomination for their nationally distributed production of The Nutcracker at the Jacobs School of Music.
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What were America’s founders reading and how did those texts shape the world they built?
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Wax is a common substance in our lives, but what is it exactly?
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WFIU invites you to a summer evening filled with live jazz, community spirit, and music under the evening sky at Jazz in July: Columbus. This free outdoor concert features the Visions Jazz Ensemble, led by Indianapolis trumpeter and composer Sam Butler, whose performances blend classic jazz traditions with contemporary influences and vibrant improvisation.
Kayte Young speaks to artist Claire Miller about her ceramics work.
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About 150 years ago, Indiana nearly bankrupted itself building a statewide canal system. Now, a new archaeological project seeks to learn more about this maligned period of Indiana history.
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US Senator and staunch Lincoln supporter Henry S. Lane may be best remembered for his three-day term as Indiana’s thirteenth governor.
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Antonia Matthew reads "The Night of January 2, 2026," "bombed building," "Jet Trail," and "Knitting Circle."
In case you missed it!
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Starting in the late 1930s, the "House of Mouse" was where many of the best American songwriters went to work. We'll sample some of their compositions.
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There are no guarantees in life. But when there are no guarantees of life and that awareness is shared globally and simultaneously, it does tend to get your attention. Being a survivor may seem with a simple choice, but with it comes the challenge of facing what you’re now left with.
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Double reed instruments — both sweet and spectacular — have been a part of music across classes and genres for centuries. This week, from shawms to bombards to the Baroque hautboy, we’re exploring music for early oboes. Our featured release is Denis Delair: The Violin Sonatas, by The Levée.
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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
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Kayte Young talks with Ceramicist Claire Miller about her delicate works that embracing fragility and the allure of a thing clearly made by a human hand. And we talk with sculptor Melanie Pennington about her statue of AIDS activist Ryan White that unveiled this week at the IU Memorial Union.
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Another section of Rogers Street will be closed for roadwork this month.
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The center, known as La Casa, invited all students for a watch party.
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First Amendment concerns stemmed from a social media post on the office's Facebook page.
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Raymond Stewart, 51, of Bedford was found dead in front The Bluebird music club Wednesday morning. The cause of death is still unknown.
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The tool uses data from standard charge lists published by Indiana hospitals.
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The handwritten 72-page constitution will be on display at home of state’s third governor through July 5
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The pest has not been detected in Indiana.
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Native to Mexico, dahlias probably grew in Aztec gardens as they were already in cultivation when the Spaniards arrived.
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Work requirements and Medicaid cuts, health experts worry changes will impact medically frail peopleSeriously ill Hoosiers could have to prove they are unable to work under a new federal definition of work requirements put forward by the Trump Administration.