Just a little over two years after its launch, The INbox is saying goodbye.
In the early 20th century, Terre Haute garnered a reputation as a city full of sex, gambling and gangs. A new book is breaking down the city's sordid past.
The Christmas cactus that greets guests at the Wylie House Museum is the same one that was seen in the house over 100 years ago.
Eighty-five years after Doc Morgan’s first broadcast at ITSC, his relative obscurity can’t overshadow his indelible mark on education, his students and his industry.
Just a few years before the Space Race, the people who would help win it were university students in Indiana with no plans of leaving the Earth.
Discover the unique history of IU’s Special Collections Lilly Library and the stories that are imbued in each artifact.
With 18,000 cubic feet filled with records in all formats, the University Archives is the largest and most comprehensive source on the history and culture of Indiana University.
For over half a century, Indiana University's first museum has provided Bloomington with the collected knowledge of many cultures from all around the world.
Since the 1960s, the remnants of New York City's St. Paul Building have taken up residency in Indianapolis' Holliday Park. Known simply as The Ruins, the architectural features provide a glimpse back at Karl Bitter's 1898 skyscraper.
To celebrate 50 years of WTIU, we asked former staff to share their favorite memories and the impacts the station has had on their lives and careers.
We dug into our station's archives to pick out some of WTIU's most memorable series.
The 1983 documentary from WTIU talks with the local jazz legends who made the genre big in Central Indiana.
Former WTIU Director of Operations and Engineering Barrie Zimmerman writes about the time before WTIU's broadcasts when the TV studio was occupied by a theater pipe organ.
Check out how local news coverage on WTIU has changed over the past few decades.
We combed the PBS archives to find 7 old PBS shows you may have forgotten about.
Just a little over two years after its launch, The INbox is saying goodbye.
In the early 20th century, Terre Haute garnered a reputation as a city full of sex, gambling and gangs. A new book is breaking down the city's sordid past.
The Christmas cactus that greets guests at the Wylie House Museum is the same one that was seen in the house over 100 years ago.
Eighty-five years after Doc Morgan’s first broadcast at ITSC, his relative obscurity can’t overshadow his indelible mark on education, his students and his industry.
Just a few years before the Space Race, the people who would help win it were university students in Indiana with no plans of leaving the Earth.
Discover the unique history of IU’s Special Collections Lilly Library and the stories that are imbued in each artifact.
With 18,000 cubic feet filled with records in all formats, the University Archives is the largest and most comprehensive source on the history and culture of Indiana University.
For over half a century, Indiana University's first museum has provided Bloomington with the collected knowledge of many cultures from all around the world.
Since the 1960s, the remnants of New York City's St. Paul Building have taken up residency in Indianapolis' Holliday Park. Known simply as The Ruins, the architectural features provide a glimpse back at Karl Bitter's 1898 skyscraper.
To celebrate 50 years of WTIU, we asked former staff to share their favorite memories and the impacts the station has had on their lives and careers.
We dug into our station's archives to pick out some of WTIU's most memorable series.
The 1983 documentary from WTIU talks with the local jazz legends who made the genre big in Central Indiana.
Former WTIU Director of Operations and Engineering Barrie Zimmerman writes about the time before WTIU's broadcasts when the TV studio was occupied by a theater pipe organ.
Check out how local news coverage on WTIU has changed over the past few decades.
We combed the PBS archives to find 7 old PBS shows you may have forgotten about.