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The student-acclaimed campus band Juny will continue to make music for the rest of the all-junior band members' college career, lead singer and guitarist Dan Miloch said. "Juny will be playing a lot more this semester," Miloch said. (0) comments

Whenever I heard a DJ mention the Rolling Stones, as a kid, I always assumed they'd taken their name from the Bob Dylan song. Simple chronology dispelled that misconception a long time ago. The band named themselves after a Muddy Waters song. But I haven't lost hope yet: Rolling Stone magazine released its first issue a year after Bob Dylan's song hit radio stations. (0) comments

Narrows members hope to stay together

The music of The Narrows will continue long after graduation, according to the band members. The three musicians of the popular student band are all graduating this semester, and their plans for the future are as inspired as the guys themselves. "Asking why I plan on making music after school is like asking why someone eats their favorite food," lead singer senior Evan Moran said, "It's just how I live, it's what we do." (0) comments

The Hillsdale College Tower Dancers return Feb. 15 to 17 with a new twist on an old dance. Though typically a contemporary troupe, next week's performance will contain elements of classical ballet in a fusion previously unseen here on campus. "We're definitely a modern dance-based company but we've had a lot of fresh talent in the last year or so who are versed in ballet and still interested in pursuing it," said Corrine Imberski, the troupe's leader and the director of the upcoming performance. (0) comments

Ralph Waldo Emerson once said, "Everything in creation has its appointed painter or poet and remains in bondage like the princess in the fairy tale 'til its appropriate liberator comes to set it free." For visiting poet Daniel Tobin, busy city life does not distract him from liberating his masterpieces. (0) comments

The Hillsdale College Jazz Big Band participated in the Ann Arbor Jazz Festival this past Saturday, hosted by the University of Michigan. The all-day event was a tribute to iconic jazz bassist Ray Brown, and a number of Michigan and regional academic ensembles were in attendance to participate in workshops, seminars, master classes, performances and adjudications. (0) comments

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