January 2023 - Radio Guide

Page 1

January 2023 WFIU/WTIU News named Report for America newsroom partner

January 2023

Vol. 72, No. 1

Directions in Sound (USPS-314900) is published each month by Indiana University Radio and Television Services, 1229 East 7th Street, Bloomington, IN 47405

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WFIU/WTIU News named Report for America newsroom partner

Report for America has selected WFIU/WTIU News to be one of nearly 30 new host newsroom partners for next year. This national service program places talented emerging journalists in local newsrooms to report on under-covered topics and communities across the United States and its territories.

“Far too many Americans desperately need reliable, fact-based information to make decisions about their daily lives, and a growing number of local newsrooms are turning to us for support,” said Kim Kleman, senior vice president of Report for America. “We were blown away by the breadth of applications we received, and only wish we had the ability to bring on even more newsrooms this year.”

Report for America will help fund a new reporter for WFIU/ WTIU News who will cover higher education.

“We are honored to receive support from Report for America to expand our local news coverage,” said WFIU/WTIU News bureau chief Sara Wittmeyer. “This position will allow us to report on the cost of higher education, the enrollment cliff, the skills gap, workforce training, and more.”

In addition to WFIU/WTIU News, among those selected to be a Report for America newsroom were recently-launched nonprofits like the Baltimore Banner, which is bringing back desperately needed coverage following cuts by hedge fund ownership at the city’s legacy newspaper; the Uvalde Leader-News, serving a Texas community still reeling from a devastating school shooting; and Metro Puerto Rico, which looks to deepen its health reporting as the island faces an aging population and struggles to recover from recent hurricanes. Several newsrooms will hire corps members to cover local sports (stories that go beyond the scoreboard); others will be fielding corps members to cover faith and religion.

With these additions, Report for America corps members will be working next year in nearly 220 newsrooms across the United States, Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico, and Guam.

Now that the newsroom selections have been made, Report for America is seeking talented, service-minded journalists and photographers to join its reporting corps—a two-year program (with an option for three years).

Questions or Comments?

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“Report for America provides a unique opportunity for journalists to pursue meaningful, local beat reporting that sadly is missing from many of today’s newsrooms,” said Earl Johnson, director of admissions at Report for America. “Beyond talented reporters and photojournalists, we are looking for a diversity of individuals who see journalism as a calling, who want to make a difference within their communities.”

The deadline to apply for the WFIU/WTIU higher education reporter position is Jan. 30, 2023. To learn more, visit reportforamerica.org/apply

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Sara W

Winter is a great time to get cozy with this simply delicious carrot ginger soup. It's also a good way to get some use out of the leftover turkey bits you might have on hand after the holidays.

Jazz Notes

Carrot Ginger Soup

2 T. butter

1½ T. finely minced ginger

4 medium carrots, peeled and sliced

26 oz. broth (chicken or vegetable)

1 c. milk (dairy or plant-based)

• Melt the butter, sauté the ginger in a saucepan.

• Add the carrots and toss with butter and ginger for about 3 minutes.

• Pour in the broth, bring to a boil then reduce heat and simmer for 15 minutes until the carrots are tender.

• Using a stick blender, puree the soup directly in the pot until velvety smooth. If you don’t have a stick blender, use a food processor or blender and puree in batches. You could also pass this through the fine setting on a food mill.

• Whisk in the milk, reheat the soup (careful not to boil), and serve with a sprinkle of chopped parsley.

Happy New Year! But before we completely bid goodbye to 2022, our weekday afternoon program Just You & Me will spend the first week of 2023 featuring some favorite recordings from the year just past, including new jazz releases, historical recordings, and music by Indiana jazz artists.

Just You & Me will also celebrate Martin Luther King, Jr. Day on Monday, January 16 with jazz tributes to the civil rights movement by present-day and past musicians. You can hear tributes to MLK himself the preceding Friday (January 13) at 9 p.m. on our weekly historical jazz program Night Lights. Other Night Lights programs this month focus on Ralph Burns, one of several talented young arrangers and composers who emerged in the wake of World War II, and the 1960s recordings of Indiana-born vibraphonist Gary Burton.

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Afterglow, our vocal-jazz show that airs each Friday before Night Lights, kicks off 2023 with “Schoolhouse Jazz!”, highlighting notable jazz artists such as Bob Dorough and Blossom Dearie who worked on the popular 1970s children’s TV show Schoolhouse Rock. Other programs highlight the 1950s work of West Coast jazz arranger Marty Paich and offer a vocaljazz preview of the upcoming Grammy Awards and a look at other new and recent jazz and traditional pop releases.

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Watch the recipe video!

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Morning Music 10 a.m. Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! This American Life 11 a.m. It’s Been a Minute Radiolab 12 p.m. Fresh Air Noon Edition On the Media Inner States 1 p.m. Performance Today Please see pages 5-8 for opera details.

Earth Eats 2 p.m. 3 p.m. Just You & Me The Soul Kitchen

Travel with Rick Steves 4 p.m. The Moth 5 p.m. All Things Considered All Things Considered 6 p.m. PorchLight WFIU Presents Marketplace 7 p.m. Exploring Music with Bill McGlaughlin Fresh Air The Thistle & Shamrock Exploring Music 8 p.m. Chicago Symphony Orchestra

Feminine Fusion 9 p.m. The Score Fiesta! Night Lights Sylvia & Friends 10 p.m. Pipedreams

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WFIU PROGRAM LISTINGS

Note: Daily listings are as complete as we can make them at press time, and we strive to provide full program information whenever possible. Some programs, however, do not provide us with information about their content. We include the titles of those programs as a convenience. When we receive no program information for a given day, the day will not appear in the listings. For a complete list of WFIU’s schedule, see the program grid on pages 3 and 4.

10:00 PM CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER

Schubert’s Trout Quintet

HARBISON: November 19, 1828 for Piano, Violin, Viola, and Cello

Emanuel Ax, piano; Cho-Liang Lin, violin; Richard O’Neill, viola; Efe Baltacigil, cello

SCHUBERT: Quintet in A Major for Piano, Violin, Viola, Cello, and Bass, D. 667, Op. 114, “Trout”

Emanuel Ax, piano; Cho-Liang Lin, violin; Richard O’Neill, viola; Efe Baltacigil, cello; Edgar Meyer, double bass

9:00 PM FIESTA!

Peruvian Composer Celso GarridoLecca

After studying in Peru and Chile, 20th century Peruvian composer Celso Garrido-Lecca was awarded a scholarship to study with Aaron Copland in Tanglewood. We will hear about his fascinating life as well as his music, including this double string quartet and bass work, Antaras

6 Friday

6:00 PM WFIU PRESENTS

8:00 PM CHICAGO

ORCHESTRA

SYMPHONY

Robert Chen Leads Mozart

MOZART: Eine kleine Nachtmusik, K. 525

MOZART: Flute Concerto No. 2in D Major, K. 314 Stefán Ragnar Höskuldsson, flute MOZART: Violin Concerto No. 3 in G Major, K. 216 (Strassburg)

Robert Chen, violin MOZART: Symphony No. 25 in G minor, K. 183

10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS

Un-Finnished Business and Other Nordic Notions

James D. Hicks regales us with additional accounts of his Scandinavian sojourns.

Tuesday

8:00 PM ETHER GAME

Appoggiatura

Join us for our most florid and flamboyant show yet as we quiz about musical ornaments and decoration in classical music.

9:00 PM

THE SCORE

Seen and Heard in 2022 Movies are back in the theaters and Edmund Stone has the best music from a year packed with blockbusters, mysteries, and more. Enjoy music from Avatar: The Way of Water, Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery, Jurassic World Dominion, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, and more.

4 Wednesday

8:00 PM SYMPHONYCAST

Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra

GINASTERA: Variaciones concertantes

JUAN PABLO CONTRERAS: Mariachitlan

MENDELSSOHN: Symphony No. 4 in A Major, “Italian”

10:00 PM THE NEW YORK

PHILHARMONIC

An All-American New Year’s Eve: Thomas Hampson Sings Copland and Porter

Alan Gilbert, conductor Thomas Hampson, baritone

COPLAND: Appalachian Spring Suite COPLAND: Old American Songs PORTER: Night and Day Who Said the Gay Paree? Where Is the Life that Late I Led? In the Still of the Night Begin the Beguine GERSHWIN: An American in Paris

5 Thursday

8:00 PM HARMONIA

Catching Boccaccio

The Decameron, Giovanni Boccaccio’s masterpiece, was a collection of fantastic tales about escape from the Black Death. How did early composers like Arcadelt, Ferrabosco, and Sweelinck set his cheerful poetry? Join us as we soothe ourselves and our souls with beautiful music.

8:00 PM AFTERGLOW Schoolhouse Jazz!

On January 6, 1973—50 years ago—Schoolhouse Rock first aired on television, teaching school children all about multiplication, American history, and more through the language of contemporary “rock” music. However, many of the musicians involved—including Bob Dorough, Jack Sheldon, Grady Tate, and Blossom Dearie—came from the world of jazz. We’ll explore the jazzier side of these singers.

9:00 PM NIGHT

LIGHTS

Midcentury Maestros: Ralph Burns Ralph Burns was one of several young arrangers who emerged in the aftermath of World War II and the peak of the swing era. This tribute features his work with Woody Herman’s big band, as well as recordings with saxophonist Ben Webster and others.

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Ralph Burns
1 Sunday
2 Monday
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Saturday

1:00 PM THE METROPOLITAN OPERA

Medea (Cherubini) – New Production/Met Premiere

Carlo Rizzi, conductor Sondra Radvanovsky (Medea), Janai Brugger (Glauce), Ekaterina Gubanova (Neris), Matthew Polenzani (Giasone), Michele Pertusi (Creonte)

8 Sunday

6:00 PM WFIU PRESENTS

9 Monday

8:00 PM CHICAGO

ORCHESTRA

Zhang & Trpčeski

SYMPHONY

NGWENYAMA: Primal Message GRIEG: Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 16 Simon Trpčeski, piano

PROKOFIEV: Symphony No. 6 in E-flat minor, Op. 111

10:00 PM

PIPEDREAMS

Onstage with Bradley Hunter Welch Enjoy this concert performance recorded at Bethel University in Minnesota.

10 Tuesday

8:00 PM

ETHER GAME

Purely Academic Students are back for a new semester after winter break. The Ether Game Brain Trust assigns some homework with a show about composers who were also music educators. Attendance is required for tonight’s quiz!

10:00

PM CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER

Schubert: From Song to Instrumental Lyricism

SCHUBERT: An Schwager Kronos for Voice and Piano, D. 369, Op. 19, No. 1 Willkommen und Abschied for Voice and Piano, D. 767, Op. 56, No. 1 Nikolay Borchev, baritone; Gilbert Kalish, piano

SCHUBERT: Trio No. 2 in E-flat Major for Piano, Violin, and Cello, D. 929, Op. 100

Juho Pohjonen, piano; Sean Lee, violin; David Finckel, cello

11 Wednesday

8:00 PM SYMPHONYCAST

Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra

Marko Ivanovic, conductor Martin Kasík, piano

JANÁČEK: The Fiddler’s Child ANTON RUBINSTEIN: Piano Concerto No. 4 in D minor, Op. 70 TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 5 in E minor, Op. 64

10:00 PM

THE NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC

Leonard Bernstein Conducts Haydn’s The Creation

HAYDN: The Creation, Hob. XXI:2 Leonard Bernstein, conductor; Judith Raskin, soprano; Alexander Young, tenor; John Reardon, baritone; Camerata Singers

HAYDN: Finale, from Trumpet Concerto Zubin Mehta, conductor; Philip Smith, trumpet

12 Thursday

8:00 PM HARMONIA

Psalm 2: The European Tour

The Book of Psalms figures prominently in the Hebrew, Christian, and Islam faiths alike. We’ll hear various settings of one psalm—Psalm 2—the one that begins, “Why do the nations rant? Why do the peoples rave uselessly?” Plus, our featured recording is Cantica Obsoleta by the ensemble Acronym.

9:00 PM FIESTA!

Chamber Music by Heitor Villa-Lobos Known mostly for his orchestral, vocal, and guitar music, Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos also composed chamber music, including string quartets and duo works with piano. This program features a some of his oftenoverlooked gems.

13 Friday

8:00 PM AFTERGLOW

The American Songbook’s “I Want” Songs

We explore wants and desires this week, hearing “I want” songs from the American Songbook, including “I Want to Be Happy,” “Whatever Lola Wants,” and “Wouldn’t It Be Loverly.”

9:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS

Dear Martin, P.S.: More Jazz Tributes to Martin Luther King, Jr. Jazz recordings in honor of the civil rights leader made by James Spaulding, Billy Taylor, Herbie Hancock, and others.

14 Saturday

1:00 PM THE METROPOLITAN OPERA

Fedora (Giordano) – New Production Marco Armiliato, conductor Sonya Yoncheva (Fedora), Rosa Feola (Olga), Piotr Beczała (Loris Ipanoff), Artur Ruciński (De Siriex)

15 Sunday

6:00 PM WFIU PRESENTS

16 Monday

8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY

ORCHESTRA

Conlon & Gavrylyuk

BACH/WILHELMJ: Air on the G String from Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D Major, BWV 1068

SHOSTAKOVICH/BARSHAI: Chamber Symphony for Strings in C minor, Op. 110a

PROKOFIEV: Piano Concerto No. 1 in D-flat Major, Op. 10

Alexander Gavrylyuk, piano

SCHUBERT: Symphony No. 3 in D Major, D. 200

10:00 PM

PIPEDREAMS

Renaissance Man

As composer, transcriber, improviser, and performer, British-born recitalist David Briggs does it all.

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Heitor Villa-Lobos

Tuesday

8:00

PM ETHER GAME Love and Death

Explore the musical impact of England’s first major celebrity, the hopelessly romantic Lord Byron.

10:00

PM CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER

Viennese Bookends BERG: Sonata for Piano, Op. 1 Alessio Bax, piano

SCHUBERT: Trio No. 1 in B-flat Major for Piano, Violin, and Cello, D. 898, Op. 99

Wu Han, piano; Phillip Setzer, violin; David Finckel, cello

18 Wednesday

8:00 PM

SYMPHONYCAST

Nashville Symphony Giancarlo Guerrero, conductor Jun Iwasaki, violin Kevin Bate, cello Tamara Winston, English horn SIBELIUS: The Swan of Tuonela BRAHMS: Concerto in A minor for Violin, Cello, and Orchestra

JENNIFER HIGDON: Blue Cathedral RAVEL: Suite of Five Pieces from Ma Mere l’Oye (Mother Goose)

10:00

PM THE NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC

All-Bach Program with Bernard Labadie and Isabelle Faust Bernard Labadie, conductor Isabelle Faust, violin

BACH, J.S.: Orchestral Suite No. 4, BWV 1069

BACH, J.S.: Violin Concerto in E major, BWV 1042

BACH, J.S.: Sinfonia from Cantata No. 42, Am Abend aber desselbigen Sabbats

BACH, J.S.: Violin Concerto in A minor, BWV 1041

BACH, J.S.: Orchestral Suite No. 3, BWV 1068

19 Thursday

8:00 PM HARMONIA

The Cornetto

French polymath Marin Mersenne wrote that the cornetto was “like a ray of sunshine piercing the shadows, when heard with the choir voices in the cathedrals or chapels.” We’ll explore the magical sound of the cornetto. Plus, our featured release is A Delicate Fire: Music of Barbara Strozzi

9:00 PM FIESTA!

Claudio Santoro: Two Compositions Fiesta presents two masterpieces by Brazilian composer Claudio Santoro, his Sonata No. 4 for Violin and Piano and his monumental Symphony No. 5.

20 Friday

8:00 PM AFTERGLOW

The Modern Touch of Marty Paich We examine the work of one of the great jazz arrangers: Marty Paich. Paich helped develop the cool, west coast sound in the 1950s, arranging for singers such as Mel Tormé, Ella Fitzgerald, and Ray Charles.

21 Saturday

1:00 PM THE METROPOLITAN OPERA

L’Elisir d’Amore (Donizetti)

Michele Gamba, conductor Golda Schultz (Adina), Javier Camarena (Nemorino), Davide Luciano (Belcore), Ambrogio Maestri (Dulcamara)

22 Sunday

6:00 PM WFIU PRESENTS

23 Monday

8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY

ORCHESTRA

Tilson Thomas & Denk

MAHLER: Blumine

BEETHOVEN: Piano Concerto No. 3 in C minor, Op. 37 Jeremy Denk, piano

BRAHMS/SCHOENBERG: Piano Quartet No. 1 in G minor, Op. 25

10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS

Wintering in Oaxaca

Explore vintage instruments in southern Mexico with Cicely Winter, director of the Institute for Historic Organs of Oaxaca (IOHIO).

24 Tuesday

8:00 PM ETHER

GAME Spring Festival

On the third day of the Lunar New Year, we celebrate Chigou’s Day with a show featuring music inspired by China and the moon.

10:00

9:00 PM NIGHT

LIGHTS

New Vibes: Gary Burton in the 1960s Vibraphonist Gary Burton was still a teenager when he burst onto the 1960s jazz scene, going on to work with Stan Getz and make several memorable recordings under his own name. We’ll hear some of that music as well as commentary from Burton himself.

PM CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER

From the Movie Screen to the Concert Hall

BERG: Sonata for Piano, Op. 1 Alessio Bax, piano

SCHUBERT: Trio No. 1 in B-flat Major for Piano, Violin, and Cello, D. 898, Op. 99

Wu Han, piano; Phillip Setzer, violin; David Finckel, cello

Bloomington 103.7 fm (WFIU) & 101.9 fm (WFIU2) • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm

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Marty Paich

25 Wednesday

8:00 PM

SYMPHONYCAST

Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra

Celebrate the Winter holidays— Christmas, the Solstice, Chanukah, New Year’s, Jonkonnu, and Twelfth Night/Epiphany—with a variety of traditional music pieces excerpted from live Christmas Revels stage productions.

26 Thursday

8:00 PM HARMONIA

Ottomania, Part One

For more than 600 years, the Ottoman or Turkish Empire governed much of the Mediterranean and Western Asia. As relations with Christian Europe ebbed and flowed, Ottoman culture left a huge impact on the arts. Join us as we listen to some of the ways this relationship played out over the centuries. Plus, our featured recording is Ensemble Animantica with Venetian, Greek, Ottoman, and Sephardic music from the time of the Cretan War.

9:00 PM

FIESTA!

Great Guitar Players: Alvaro Pierri Coming from a family of guitar players and teachers, Alvaro Pierri is one of today’s most prestigious classical guitarists. We listen to some guitar solo pieces, as well as Alvaro performing as a soloist with different instrumental ensembles.

27 Friday

8:00 PM AFTERGLOW

2023 Grammy Award Preview

The 65th annual Grammy Awards are on Sunday, February 5. We’ll preview some of the vocal jazz nominees, including Samara Joy and Cecile McLorin Salvant, and feature other new vocal jazz and traditional pop releases.

9:00 PM

NIGHT LIGHTS

A Winning Season of Jazz: Bruce Lundvall and Columbia Records in the Late 1970s

In the late 1970s, the Columbia label was home to an array of talented jazz musicians, including Woody Shaw, Arthur Blythe, Dexter Gordon, and Weather Report. We’ll hear

music from all these artists and others and hear remembrances from jazz producer Michael Cuscuna.

28 Saturday

12:00 PM THE METROPOLITAN OPERA

Dialogues des Carmélites (Poulenc) Bertrand de Billy, conductor Ailyn Pérez (Blanche de la Force), Eva-Maria Westbroek (Mme. Lidoine), Sabine Devieilhe (Constance), Jamie Barton (Mère Marie), Alice Coote (Mme. de Croissy), Piotr Buszewski (Chevalier de la Force), Laurent Naouri (Marquis de la Force) 29 Sunday

6:00 PM WFIU PRESENTS

30 Monday

8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY

ORCHESTRA

Muti Conducts Beethoven 9 BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125

10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Demers, Not Demure Concert performances by the outstanding world-traveling recitalist and teacher, Isabelle Demers.

31 Tuesday

8:00 PM ETHER GAME

Wienerschnitzel

Land of peaks, O land of rivers! Join us as we waltz our way through the musical heritage of Austria.

10:00 PM CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER

George Crumb’s American Songbook CRUMB: Selections from American Songbooks for Baritone, Piano, and Percussion

Thomas Hampson, baritone; Gilbert Kalish, piano, Ayano Kataoka, David Cossin, Haruka Fujii, Jeffrey Milarsky, percussion

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Eiteljorg Museum (#173) 500 W. Washington St. Indianapolis, IN (317) 636-9378    eiteljorg.org

Valid for 2-for-1 admission during the month; present MemberCard at museum admission desk; subject to availability.

eXplore Brown County at Valley Branch Retreat (#288) 2620 Valley Branch Rd. Nashville, IN (812) 988-7750 explorebrowncounty.com

Valid Sunday-Thursday through May for 20% discount on any zip line, 1-hr. ATV tour or paintball activities; online reservations recommended (use promotional code “MemberCard”); subject to availability.

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All

Creatures Great and Small –Season 3

Sunday, January 8 at 9pm

Wedding bells chime and animal ailments abound in the highly anticipated new season of All Creatures Great and Small. Season 3 begins in spring 1939 as James and Helen prepare to walk down the aisle. Should their wedding go off without a hitch—and what are the chances of that?—James will have a new wife and a new stake in the business to think of. The pressure is on, and while his scheme to participate in the government’s practice to test for tuberculosis in cattle will expand the veterinary practice, it could put James on the outs with local farmers.

Helen, too, will face new challenges, not least of them letting go of her old life and finding her new place within the welcoming, yet eccentric, embrace of Skeldale House. Tristan, having passed his exams at long last, must now face the world as a qualified vet. Will he rise to the occasion? And, more importantly, will he win big brother Siegfried’s approval? He certainly will have Mrs. Hall’s unconditional support. But in Season 3, she may be ready to open up to affection beyond her work family…and cricket.

As war with Germany looms on the horizon, Skeldale House’s irrepressible but unpredictable proprietor, Siegfried, contends with painful memories of his own experiences during the First World War, when he served in combat with the Army Veterinary Corps. And Mrs. Pumphrey, the wonderfully eccentric owner of Tricki, returns with her pampered Pekingese.

Jazz at Lincoln Center Presents Songs We Love

Monday, February 20, 2023 IU Auditorium | Bloomington, IN Emanuel Ax

Tuesday, April 25, 2023 IU Auditorium | Bloomington, IN

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Dr. David Howell, Dr. Timothy Pliske DDS of Bedford & Bloomington South Central Oral Surgery

PROGRAM UNDERWRITERS

Anderson’s Medical Products

Baird

Bell Trace

Bicycle Garage, Inc.

Bloomingfoods

Bloomington Boogies

Bloomington Chamber Singers

Bloomington Open Studios Tour

Bloomington Rotary Toast

Bloomington Symphony Orchestra

Bluestone Tree

Bluestone Organic Brown County Music Center

Buskirk-Chumley Theater

Charles Schwab, Jeremy Zeichner & Assoc.

Columbus Visitors Center

Community Lincoln of Bloomington Constellation Stage & Screen

Crazy Horse

Déjà vu Art & Fine Craft Show

Dell Brothers

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Greene & Schultz, Trial Lawyers, P.C.

The Herald-Times

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Indiana University

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IU Auditorium

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IU Credit Union

IU Credit Union—Investment Services

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Kurt Vonnegut Library & Museum

Lost Farm Meal Service

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Monroe County CASA

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Morgenstern’s Bookshop & Café

Musicians Club of Women

Our Brown County Magazine

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Slotegraaf Niehoff, P.C.

Sustain IU Williamson Insurance

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Bicycle Garage, Inc. (Focus on Flowers)

Bloomingfoods (Earth Eats)

Bloomington Health Foundation (Noon Edition)

Chamberfest (Morning Music)

Charles Schwab, Jeremy Zeichner & Assoc. (Morning Music) (The Soul Kitchen Fridays)

Columbus Visitors Center (WFIU News)

Community Lincoln of Bloomington (Morning Music)

Crazy Horse (Afterglow) (Night Lights)

Designscape Horticultural Services, Inc. (Focus on Flowers)

(The Soul Kitchen Saturdays)

Early Music America (Harmonia)

Estate & Downsizing Specialists (Noon Edition)

Freitag & Martoglio, Attorneys at Law (The Soul Kitchen Fridays)

Greater Bloomington Chamber of Commerce (PorchLight)

Griffy Creek Studio, Bill Brown (Earth Eats)

Chris Holly, Elder Law Attorney (PorchLight)

Hopscotch Coffee (Morning Music)

Indiana University (A Moment of Science)

Indianapolis Early Music (Harmonia)

Inside Out Kitchen & Bath (Just You & Me)

IU Center for Rural Engagement (WFIU News)

IU Credit Union (Just You & Me)

IU School of Education (WFIU News)

ISU | The May Agency (Just You & Me)

Juniper Art Gallery (PorchLight)

Landlocked Music (Night Lights)

Mallor | Grodner Attorneys (WFIU News)

Mann Plumbing/MPI Solar

(The Soul Kitchen Saturdays)

Meadowood (Morning Music)

Monroe County YMCA (PorchLight)

Rainbow Bakery (Morning Music)

Elizabeth Ruh, Personal Financial Services (Earth Eats)

Smithville (Noon Edition) (WFIU News)

Soma Coffee House & Juice Bar (Afterglow) (The Soul Kitchen Saturdays)

Dale Steffey Books (Morning Music)

Stumpner’s Building Services (The Soul Kitchen Fridays)

Village Deli (Night Lights)

WWA Planning & Investments (Just You & Me)

Corporate Partnerships corpdev@indiana.edu LEARN HOW YOUR BUSINESS CAN PARTNER WITH WFIU Marianne Woodruff 812.855.9208 mawoodru@iu.edu Lacy Jones 812.855.7247 laejones@iu.edu Pamela Boswell-Dike 812.856.1870 pmboswel@iu.edu

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