Off stage
After the loss of three professors in four months in 2016, IU’s ballet department was left with just one senior faculty member. Almost two years after the implosion, here's how the department is trying to rebuild.
After the loss of three professors in four months in 2016, IU’s ballet department was left with just one senior faculty member. Almost two years after the implosion, here's how the department is trying to rebuild.
Three months ago, President Trump repealed Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, which allowed hundreds of thousands of immigrants brought to the United States by their parents as children to go to college and find jobs. Without congressional action, these students will have to return to countries they no longer remember
When IU football plays at home, its athletic director tries to be the ultimate host.
As the 2017-18 season gears up, Coach Archie Miller and the IU men's basketball team look to return to the NCAA tournament. Read on for previews, tours, insights, players to watch and more.
Scientists paid little attention to bats until a decade ago, when a disease called white nose syndrome started wiping out populations across the United States. Now, researchers race against time to find out what bats — and their disappearance — mean for the world at large.
This is a four-part series about IU's system of sexual assault investigations. In a heated national conversation, criticism of university sexual assault investigations is multiplying. IU is no different. Students on both sides — those who have reported and have been accused — say IU’s system can do better.
Hollywood movies make a lot of money. But they don't make any sense.
For years, Amanda Grant lived in fear of her father and his rage. Now, at 19, she’s suing him for the abuse she suffered.
Bob Knight couldn't control that he would grow old one day. He just didn't get to grow old how he planned.
This is the fourth installment in an IDS series covering the opioid epidemic across Indiana. Will Cooke is the only doctor in Austin, Indiana, a city that in 2015 experienced the worst HIV outbreak in US history. Two years later, his work is still not done.
After 25 years in prison for a crime he didn't commit, Darryl Pinkins is finally free. Now he's starting over in a world that did not wait for him.
This is the third installment in an IDS series covering the opioid epidemic across Indiana. Two years ago, Brittany Combs would have been scared to drive into neighborhoods populated by drug addicts. But now, she makes sure she's there every week, trying to save their lives.
Brush up on everything from red carpet predictions to the uncertain legacy of "La La Land."
This is the second installment in an IDS series covering the opioid epidemic across Indiana. Public health nurse Jackie Crane sees addiction and overdose at work every day. She never thought she'd see it happen to her own son.
This is the first installment in an IDS series covering the opioid epidemic across Indiana. The opioid epidemic ravages southern Indiana. Debate remains among lawmakers and advocates as to how it should be handled. And in the middle of it all, people with addictions brace for impact.
President Trump signed an executive order January 27, 2017 prohibiting all citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries from traveling to the US for 90 days. Following the order, protests erupted across the nation. The IDS sent reporters to cover protests and monitored the reactions of policy-makers and educators on social media. This is what they saw.
The IDS sent a team of journalists to cover the inauguration. Here is a compilation of their reporting from the weekend of Jan. 20, 2017.
Amid rising deforestation, a Brown County logger defends responsible practice. Kevin Pool , center, and Gary look up at the canopy for the next tree to cut at a logging site on the east side of Indianapolis, Indiana on Dec. 2. "I'm always looking up," Pool said. "You see that? That's what they call a widow maker."
More big cats live in captivity in the U.S. than in the wild. They often come from abusive homes and are left in the abandoned circuses, barns and basements. For these nearly 200 big cats, Indiana is home.
PART THREE of our sexual assault investigation series: One investigation, six weeks, thirteen missing pages. IU found a total of seven alleged victims of a former ballet instructor.