Staff Pick
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The Ernie Pyle Experiment was created from the archives of the Ernie Pyle collection at the Lilly Library of Indiana University. It is a thirteen-episode podcast chronicling Ernie Pyle’s pre-war work as a traveling columnist for the Scripps-Howard Newspaper syndicate.
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The judge ruled that the statute of limitations had passed. The plaintiffs played for IU in the 1980s and 1990s.
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What started as a routine research task turned into a community-wide impact. Learn how the Blue Envelope Program made its way to Monroe County—and why it matters for safer, more compassionate interactions.
Author Raiford Guins takes us down the coin slot to look at the complex origins of Pong.
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Inside the City of Kokomo's Record Breaking Attractions: the Steer and the Stump
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Kourtney Jones reads "Day Zero" and "The Other Side of It."
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Explore how land, food systems, and rural values shape decision-making across Indiana’s agricultural communities.
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Our brains are three times as large as our closest evolutionary relative. But the size of the human brain hasn't just continually grown during our evolution.
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This week, a look at the music of composer Cy Coleman, including songs like "Witchcraft," "The Best Is Yet To Come," "Big Spender," and "I Walk A Little Faster."
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Submit your answers for tonight's game. Try bonus trivia or get helpful hints. Get a little salty
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There’s an antiphon that features in the masses for Easter Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday. Its words begin: “This is the day the Lord has made,” and ends with a joyous Alleluya. This week on Harmonia, exultant music for Easter. Join us!
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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.
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What do you know about sponges? Learn all about these unique members of the animal kingdom with today's A Moment of Science.
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April is known as the cruelest month due to the erratic weather and the possibility for freezing temperatures to creep back in and injure new plants.
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Our bodies prefer to get their energy from carbs. But does it matter what kind of carbohydrates you put into your body?
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Tuesday’s first run came after more than five years of construction and decades of planning.
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Anonymous donors gifted Indiana University Maurer School of Law’s class of 2026 $1.6 million dollars, the school announced. The 156 J.D. graduates will each receive $10,000 each.
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The proposal first came before City Council in February, but the question of how many housing units in Hopewell will remain permanently "affordable" has held back a vote.
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About 1,400 employees will remain at the site post layoffs.
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Crocodilians appear to eat rocks on purpose, but why exactly would they want to do that?
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For music therapists, playtime is powerful. Sheri Robb, an Indiana University professor of supportive oncology, has been researching how young children with cancer and their parents are helped by music therapy.
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Local organizers estimate they pulled more than 9,000 people to the Allen County Courthouse Green on Saturday. Additional protests saw more than 100 people in the more rural communities around the region.