Pianist Elliott Peltzman plays the keyboard during the Stone Foxes show Thursday evening at the Bishop Bar. The Stone Foxes are based out of San Francisco, California.
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From left to right, guitarist Vince Dewald, bass player Brian Bakalian and pianist Elliott Peltzman perform together during The Stone Foxes show Thursday evening at the Bishop Bar.
Ben Andrews of the Stone Foxes sings with the group during its show Thursday evening at the Bishop Bar. Andrews, in edition to playing the guitar and providing vocals, is the band’s violin player.
Guitarist Vince Dewald performs during the opening song of the Stone Foxes show at the Bishop Bar on Thursday evening. The Stone Foxes are based out of San Francisco, California.
Ben Andrews plays the violin during the Stone Foxes show Thursday evening at the Bishop Bar. The Stone Foxes released an EP called "Visalia" in September.
Singer Shannon Koehler of the Stone Foxes sings the opening song of their act Thursday evening at the Bishop Bar. Koehler has undergone 11 heart surgeries, but he continues to perform with the band, which he founded with his brother Spence Koehler.
Then-freshman running back Tyler Natee, now a sophomore, runs the ball against Michigan State during an October 2016 game. Natee was one of two IU players to announce their intent to transfer to a different school this past week via Twitter.
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Head coach Teri Moren takes a knee at the edge of the court during the fourth quarter of play in 2016. Moren has added a 10th player to the women's basketball team in junior walk-on guard Grace Withrow.
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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, 2016. "I'm always looking up," Pool said. "You see that? That's what they call a widow maker."
Something in the night
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.
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Indiana State University doctoral student Tim Divoll lifts a pole to set up a third net that surrounds the pond on June 21 in the Morgan-Monroe State Forest. A group of researchers, which included Divoll, spent the summer in Brown County conducting research on various bats, such as the Indiana Bat, whose population has been decimated due to white nose syndrome.
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Ball State graduate student Keifer Titus, left, laughs with Indiana State University doctoral students Lizz Beilke, center, and Tim Divoll as they prepare to set up nets intended to catch bats for research purposes on June 21. The team spent the summer in the Morgan Monroe State Forest, along with other graduate students, catching and cataloguing research on multiple species of bats, including the endangered Indiana Bat.
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Indiana State University doctoral student Lizz Beilke walks a net across the length of a small pond in the Morgan Monroe State Forest on June 21. The group of researchers set up an array of three nets around the pond to catch the bats. This proves difficult because the bats are aware that the nets are there due to their echo location.
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Indiana State University doctoral student Lizz Beilke holds a Indiana Bat after untangling the bat from a net on June 21 in the Morgan-Monroe State Forest. The group measured the bat's wingspan, took hair and guano samples. Later attached a radio transmitter to its back. The Indiana Bat is one species of bat that has been affected by white nose syndrome. It has decimated bat populations across North America. Introduced in New York in 2006, the fungus attacks bats when they hibernate during the winter.
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Indiana State University doctoral student Time Divoll looks at the tree canopy surrounding a pond in Brown County on June 21. Divoll was looking for the best way to position the anchor points with is mallet for a net, a net intended to catch bats.
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Indiana State University doctoral student Tim Divoll prepares surgical cement to be used to attach a radio transmitter to the back of a bat. The transmitters are small so that they fit on the backs of the bats.They help Divoll track the movements of the Indiana Bat, which is endangered due to white nose syndrome.
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Indiana State University doctoral students Tim Divoll, left, and Lizz Beilke examine the wing of a bat on June 21 in the Morgan-Monroe State Forest. The group takes hair, guano and skin samples from the bats after catching them. They also measure wingspan, attach tags to the wings and in the case of the Indiana Bat, tracking devices. The Indiana Bat has been moved onto the endangered species list after being devastated by white nose syndrome.
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Indiana State University doctoral students Tim Divoll, left, and Lizz Beilke place a radio transmitter on the back of an Indiana Bat on June 21 in the Morgan-Monroe State Forest. Since so little is known about bats, it is important that someone is collecting information about their things like diet and movements of the bats, according to Divoll.
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An Indiana Bat is shown with a radio transmitter attached to its back on June 21 in the Morgan-Monroe Star Forest. The trackers last for several weeks before falling off the bats. Tim Divoll and his team do their best to collect the transmitters, which can be hard to find because of their size.
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Indiana State University doctoral student Lizz Beilke untangles the first catch of the night, an endangered Indiana Bat, from a net setup near the pond in the Morgan Monroe State Forest on June 21. The net had only ben up for about 10 minutes before the team had their first bat to study for the evening.