Bloomington Wineries Documentary
Edit by Gary Powell. Writing by Gary Powell and Brendan Wood. Audio by Gary Powell and Brendan Wood. Butler Winery footage shot by Gary Powell. Oliver Winery footage shot by Brendan Wood.
04-25-2017 John Butler on the Easter Floods of 1913 and the Severe Drought that Followed
In 1913 the United States was hit with a pair of environmental disasters. On March 25, 1913 the Great Easter flood wreaked havoc across much of the country, killing hundreds and damaging or flooding towns from Nebraska to the eastern seaboard. Then in late summer a severe drought began that would cripple the Midwest and Upper South, this time ruining crops and threatening water supplies. This talk details how Bloomington was affected by these twin crises and the essential role the railroad played in overcoming them.
About our speaker:
John Butler is a 20th Century U.S. historian specializing in landscape and transportation. He graduated from I.U. in 2012 after completing his PhD thesis, A History of Railroad Depots in Bloomington, Indiana And Roanoke, Virginia, which examined the interaction of these places and their railroad depots. A life-long Bloomington resident, John is currently involved in the operations of his family business, the Butler Winery.
Indiana University's Another Round at Oliver Winery 2014
In The Still Of The Night, featuring Jake Forrestal
OGLAKCIOGLU PARK HOTEL
Our hotel has 6 suites and 43 rooms, in total 49 rooms. The standard facilities of our rooms are: LCD 19 TV, mini bar, hair dryer, personal case, wireless and wired internet, VRF air conditioner system and central heating, direct telephone, satellite broadcasting with near 1000 channels and room service. Our guests can choose from 1000 channels, not limited to 30 or 40 channels and especially foreign guests can have the chance finding a channel in their mother tongue. Also multivision channels that screen the movies at theatres are active without secret codes. Park Hotel Izmir created a different architectural building which has an artistic view, outside the standard modern hotel business view. Park Hotel's internal building is built by an artist, not an interior designer. The symbol of Izmir, second Clock Tower's replica is in our hotel. Also in lobby, we have botanic garden which has birds, fishes, turtles and tropical plants and called as temple, and fireside that we light in the evenings. You can drink your wine in cold winter nights, watching the colorful fishes in our giant aquarium. Other privilege that Park Hotel Izmir presents due to the care taken to the least details is our soap. We are at nature's side. As you know, everything natural is expensive. But we took our natural soaps that have daphne and thyme odors, not bewaring from any detail or cost concerning our guests' satisfaction, in our detailed service approach.
This description is provided by the hotel.
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Turtle Run Winery/Vintage Indiana 2014
Turtle Run Winery at the 15th annual Vintage Indiana Wine Festival. The festival was held at the Military Park in Downtown Indianapolis on June 7, 2014. vintageindiana.com
*Disclaimer-I don't own the copyright to the song used in the video.
Fox 9 News Explores RiverSouth!
Fox 9 footprint: Shakopee, Minn.
Enough Said 11/18/2016
Philando Castile shooting charges, ISIS recruits sentenced, Twins payroll, peach emoji controversy, winter weather
#HOWDOYOUSUMMER
Vineyard Vines Whale Rep Application for Alexis Giannini. I attend the University of Southern Indiana and am apart of the Class of 2017. Major: Public Relations Minor: Marketing
Rob Phinisee talks IU, Indiana All-Stars
IU coach Teri Moren giving lots of hugs to former players, coaches after ISU beats Hoosiers.
IU coach Teri Moren giving lots of hugs to former players, coaches after ISU beats Hoosiers.
By: Craig Pearson - Native of Northwest Indiana. Sports geek of all forms. Still a baseball player and triathlete. Cover minor league baseball, Indiana State women's basketball, NCAA Cross Country and track, and myriad of high school sports in the Wabash Valley.
Published on: November 30, 2014
Source:
What's that Blue Light in the Back of the Mirror? - Indiana University Jazz Ensemble
What's that Blue Light in the Back of the Mirror? by Matthew Waterman
Indiana University Jazz Ensemble directed by Matthew Waterman
April 20, 2019, Musical Arts Center, Indiana University Bloomington
Soloist: Joel Tucker, guitar
Voice: Elena Escudero
Saxophones
Amanda Gardier, Garrett Fasig, Arman Sangalang, Tim Kreis, Jimmy Farace
Trumpets
Clark Hunt, Nate Vanderwerf, Kennedy Sabin, Sam Butler
Trombones
Tommy Neidecker, Andrew Danforth, Jake Handelman, Jackson McLellan
Rhythm Section
Joel Tucker, guitar; Ellie Pruneau, piano; Brendan Keller-Tuberg, bass; Jameson Scriver, drums
To learn more about Jazz Studies at the Jacobs School of Music, visit
Check us out on SoundCloud:
and facebook and Instagram: iujazzstudies
It's Still Me Wig Studio on Fox9 News
28100 Story Hill Lane, Los Altos Hills
Entertainer's Dream Home
Come and join us for Live Jazz and Complimentary Catered Lunch & Lattes at the Open House!
OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY & SUNDAY 1pm -- 5pm
This luxurious 4,557 sq. ft. residence (per county) sits on over an acre lot (per county) in Los Altos Hills. If you enjoy opulent living then this 4 bedrooms and 4 and a half bath home is for you. The serene hillside location and tranquil spa-like ambiance of the home are sure to take away any stress in your life. This home is conveniently located minutes away from Arastradero Preserve and the city of Palo Alto. As you step through the magnificent stainless steel doors you will enjoy views of the stunning pool featuring a cascading waterfall and park-like backyard. The home features vaulted wood-beamed ceilings, designer fixtures, custom cabinetry, a banquet sized dining room and a three-car garage. The Chef's kitchen enjoys a large center island, separate Wolf stove and cook top, a sub-zero refrigerator, ice maker, EuroCave Wine Cellar, oversized pantry, and butler pantry. The grand family room has an abundance of space ideal for entertaining. The lavish master suite is well-appointed with a spacious sitting room, a fireplace, and access to a private patio garden. This is a great home with excellent schools: Nixon Elementary (API 955), Terman Middle (API 968), and Henry Gunn High (API 917) (Buyers to verify Enrollment)
OFFERED AT $3,998,000
For video tour, more photos and information please visit: 28100StoryHill.com
Comfort Inn & Suites - Brandywine Valley
We're not your average Comfort Inn & Suites! This award-winning hotel is centrally located in the heart of Brandywine Valley and is perfect for business and leisure travelers alike! Spacious guest rooms, heated indoor pool, fitness center, lobby bar, gift shop with wine and beer, HOT continental breakfast every morning, business center, and meeting room! Whirlpool Suites and a Presidential Suite available! Call today to make your reservation: 610-399-4600 or visit choicehotels.com Your Comfort - Our Priority!
(Filmed/Edited by Erica Brooks. VO/Narration by Jackie Read)
Sounds of a Glass Armonica
Composer William Zeitler plays a glass armonica, invented by Benjamin Franklin in 1761. For more on this fascinating story read the full article here on the Toronto Star: Or read an excerpt of Joe Fiorito's article below:
Rare instrument makes an eerie Toronto debut: Fiorita
The mad scene, in Donizetti’s “Lucia di Lammermoor,” will feature a rare glass armonica performance by William Zeitler.
The second thing you learn, when you learn to drink wine, is how much fun it is to run a wet finger along the rim of the glass in order to make an eerie musical sound.
The third thing you learn is that, if you run your wet finger around the rim of a glass half-full, it will produce a different sound than that of a glass that is full.
The first thing you learn? If you have to ask, you have never had a glass. Now, let the curtain rise on Lucia di Lammermoor.
I will, as usual, explain:
The Canadian Opera Company is mounting a production of Donizetti’s masterwork; during the performance, eerie music plays as Lucia goes mad.
That music was written for a rare and peculiar instrument; the dull call it a bowl organ; snobs call it a hydrocrystalophone; you and I will call it what its inventor, Ben Franklin, called it.
The glass armonica.
Franklin, who could not refrain from inventing things, was in England in 1761 when he saw a fellow playing glasses filled with water; intrigued, he had some glass bowls made, large and small; these he mounted on a spindle, and he used a treadle to make them spin. Then he wet his fingers, and Bob was his uncle.
Enter William Zeitler. He is from California, and has been brought here for the Lucia. We met the other day, at the Four Seasons Centre. He led me backstage to a rehearsal hall. We talked as we walked.
He said, “The music for the mad scene was composed for the armonica; it has an other-worldly sound, but that first player was a pain in the neck, according to the story, so it’s usually played on the flute.” And, of course, there are more flutes than armonicas in the world.
The rehearsal hall looks like a high school gym without the basketball nets. The armonica sat off to the side on its own table; squint, and it looks like bubbles; you want to hold your breath.
Zeitler, a trusting soul, left me alone for a moment, saying, “I’m going to find some dihydromonoxide.”
Water, to you.
He needed to wash his hands. His fingers must be oil-free when he plays. “You want your hands squeaky-clean. I use lava soap; four out of five armonica players agree.” That’s a joke. There are only five or six armonica players in the world.
He returned with a bowl of water and set it down. Water, fingertips; rosin, bow; same thing.
Zeitler’s first instrument was the piano, but as soon as he heard the armonica, he was hooked. He had one made 15 years ago in Waltham, Mass., by the late and legendary Gerhard Finkenbeiner.
Zeitler’s instrument has 44 bowls, some of which are rimmed with gold to indicate the equivalent of what would be, on the piano, black keys.
The set of bowls is worth $36,000. He travels with them in a special nesting case; the rest of the instrument — spindle, brackets etc. — accompanies him as excess baggage.
He then turned on an electrical device which set the spindle spinning, wet his fingers and began to play the mad scene from the opera. The music is haunting; if I say it is mesmerizing, I’m not kidding.
Mesmer; look him up.
Zeitler has recorded 10 CDs, eight of which are his own music; the other two contain music written for the instrument by Mozart and others.
When he finished with the mad scene, I, cheekily, asked him to play “Stairway To Heaven.” He, cheekily, obliged.
Jimmy Page, but better.
“Lucia di Lammermoor?” That’s Italian for “I love Lucy.” No, it isn’t. But you should go and see the opera, if only to hear Mr. Zeitler rock his bowls.
Anders Osborne Happy Birthday Ronda/Windows
Anders Osborne Happy Birthday Ronda/Windows
Castle Theater, Bloomington, Ill. 2-10-19
Women's Golf Meets Traden
A few members of the women's golf team at Oklahoma Baptist University recently visited a young golfer named Traden in the hospital to pray with his family and bring him encouragement. Check out their story here!
Indiana Newsdesk, November 9, 2018 Midterm Election, Prison Release Training
More News: Indiana Newsdesk
The 2018 midterm election is over, which means campaigning for 2020 is already underway.
And there’s more than elections in Indiana. We hear from protesters upset over President Trump’s firing of Jeff Sessions, ongoing mold problems on IU’s campus, and more of the latest headlines from across the state.
We take you inside a state prison’ where women are getting hands-on training that aims to help them succeed after their release and how it could help them land high-paying jobs in the tech industry.
Those stories plus the latest news headlines from across the state right now on Indiana Newsdesk!
Community College of Philadelphia's Family Tree Campaign Donors
Watch a video of members of Community College of Philadelphia College family who have generously contributed to the College Family Tree Campaign. Learn more about the College's campaign by visiting
Indiana Newsdesk, April 8, 2016 Asian Carp & Affordable Dental
More News: Indiana Newsdesk
People are getting creative in an attempt to stop the spread of the invasive Asian Carp. Coming up a tour of a carp processing plant that’s considering all kinds of uses for the fish.
Plus, it’s a growing problem across the country, but particularly in Indiana – access to affordable dental care. Ahead, at look at volunteer efforts to get Indiana’s most vulnerable children to the dentist.
And it looks like a good time, but there’s a lot going on in this after school activity. Ahead how teachers are using foam pipes to reinforce STEM skills and teach teamwork.
Those stories plus the latest headlines from across the state Friday at 6 p.m. on Indiana Newsdesk.