Index Staff playlist – Spooky Season
This week, the Index Staff decided to turn to their favorite fall vibes songs to get us in the right spirits for the upcoming spooky holiday.
This week, the Index Staff decided to turn to their favorite fall vibes songs to get us in the right spirits for the upcoming spooky holiday.
As part of Pacific University’s Instant Theater Festival, play writers are assigned a random prop that must be in their play. For actor Xel Heidel, their cast’s assigned prop of cabbages was an opportunity for them to leave their mark in the play.
Student musicians in the Pacific University Symphonic Band are ecstatic to be back in the auditorium making music together. Despite feeling disconnected last year because of pandemic restrictions, coming back together feels as natural as ever.
Diamond Palace is a frequent haunt for Pacific University students, due to the venue’s proximity to campus, affordable drinks, and fun activities like a mechanical bull.
On this week’s Index Staff Playlist, the Index staff share songs that capture the experience of returning to a new normal.
Kyla Wilson explores Halsey’s new album “If I Can’t Have Love, I Want Power,” which shares their experiences of pregnancy and childbirth, along with the horrors associated with them.
Luke Whitaker dives into the album “Come In” by Weatherday, which definitely has the ability to join the same stature as all of the relative modern classics.
On this week’s Index Staff Playlist, the Index staff share songs from artists that explore gender, sexuality, and what it means to be part of the LGBT+ community.
Porter Robinson’s sophomore effort “Nurture” is an original yet personal record about being in an intense artistic rut. Quint Iverson reviews for the Index.
Pacific University Drama Club presented the Sera Delle Arti display on Friday, April 30 at 7 pm. The showcase displayed art from various genres created by members of the Pacific community.
On this week’s Index Staff Playlist, the Index staff share their favorite songs or soundtracks from film history.
For this week’s playlist, the Index staff revisit some classic cuts that take us right back to our childhood