Santa’s behind schedule: this holiday season may be downsized by supply chain issues
IU experts say supply chain issues affecting retail stores this holiday season could cause constraints on the gifts given.
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IU experts say supply chain issues affecting retail stores this holiday season could cause constraints on the gifts given.
An IU professor and students said being organized in their studies and life during finals season helps keep stress levels down.
A study co-authored by researchers at IU and the University of Central Florida shows a person is more likely to make successful investment decisions when they make their decisions around their most physically energetic times of day, according to an IU press release.
Members of the IU Police Department and a university official said students and staff need to be aware of the threat of scams present here on campus year round, but it is especially important with tax season approaching.
IU sociology professor Anna Mueller and a team of five undergraduate and graduate students are researching more effective ways to for schools to prevent suicide by studying the prevention and response strategies of schools in Colorado.
Wheeler Mission in Bloomington recently purchased an additional building to expand its campus site for its shelter and services at 215 Westplex Ave, according to a previous article by the IDS.
TV and movie producer Kristin Hahn will visit campus Wednesday at the IU Cinema to show scenes from “The Morning Show”, which she produced, to stimulate discussions about diversity in the business world, according to an IU press release.
Trap Mike’s Late Night Market, a delivery-only restaurant, closed indefinitely Monday night, according to the restaurant’s announcement on its Instagram account.
IU and state health officials said students and fellow Hoosiers should get their flu shots to combat the pandemic and the approaching influenza season.
The new IU Health Hospital in Bloomington aims to provide students in the IU Health Sciences program access to health care and clinical spaces through the use of the Indiana University Regional Academic Health Center, Brain Shockney, IU Health South Central Region president, said.
Approval for vaccinating young children is essential to combatting the COVID-19 pandemic and keeping them in school, Monroe County Community School Corporation administrators said.
Exodus Refugee Immgriation, a nonprofit resettlement agency based in Indianapolis, plans to open a resettlement office in Bloomington by the end of the year, executive director Cole Varga said.
Three IU juniors claim they were living in a mold-infested apartment for months at the off campus student housing complex The Dillon, until they decided to move out Sept. 8.
As members of the IU Hispanic and Latino communities celebrate the National Hispanic Heritage Month, many called for IU administrators and students to recognize and appreciate their culture beyond the commemoration.
The United States Agency for International Development granted $14.2 million to the partnership between IU and the three biggest university systems in Vietnam in hopes of modernizing their higher education system.
The Monroe County Community School Corporation is having trouble supplying students with consistent bus routes, which has sometimes caused them to arrive late to school, some parents said.
The Indiana Graduate Workers Coalition is actively trying to organize a union for graduate employees of the university. Graduate workers at IU are demanding a response to what they call a lack of dignified working conditions such as unlivable pay and sizable fees to the university, IGWC spokesperson Cole Nelson said.
IU’s international student population dropped from around 5,500 students in fall 2019 to about 4,700 students enrolled this fall due to the complications from the COVID-19 pandemic.
Students have been experiencing extended bus delays on the campus bus service, which has caused them to arrive late to class, director of IU Campus Bus Service Brian R Noojin said.
CHICAGO -- IU football coach Terry Hoeppner has a lot of sayings. He has one on a sign in his office. 'Recruit 'em every day,' the sign reads. No, not high school prospects or potential players, but fans. And since Hoeppner took his self-proclaimed dream job Dec. 17, 2004, he has done just that, attending more than 50 official IU functions and increasing season ticket sales at a record pace. \nNow Hoeppner gets the chance Monday to do what Athletics \nDirector Rick Greenspan hired him to do -- coach football. And Hoeppner could not be more excited as he and seniors Adam Hines, John Panozzo and Chris Taylor met up with a throng of local and national media for Big Ten Media Day in Chicago at the Hyatt Regency Hotel Monday and Tuesday. \n"It starts with the players. I told them from day one that they needed to walk, talk and think like champions in everything they do," Hoeppner said. "They are living up to that approach, and with the tremendous support that we have received from our fans, we'll be ready to go."\nBut even thinking like champions is difficult at a school which hasn't donned a Big Ten crown since the Lyndon B. Johnson administration. \nMany more of Hoeppner's catch phrases came out during the two day event. \n"If you're ignorant of history, then you are destined to repeat it," he said. "But I'm not ignorant of our program's recent history. If you think you can or you think you can't, you're right. And I truly believe we can be a successful program." \nHoeppner is not alone in the belief IU can get to a bowl. His players have bought into the system, according to senior leaders, Taylor and Panozzo. Taylor said the biggest change from last year is summed up in one word -- excitement.\n"The whole state of Indiana is excited about football now," Taylor said. "Coach Hoeppner has promoted the program so well. It's a great feeling to have a coach that's behind you and we're going to win for him."\nOpposing coaches feel the vibe too.\n"(Hoeppner) did a great job at Miami (Ohio) after my departure," said Northwestern coach and long-time friend Randy Walker. "I think his opportunity at Indiana is going to be marked with a lot of excitement. He's a great football coach, and he's going to do a great job there."\nHoeppner has a book, but it is for inspiration rather than new sayings. 'Barry's Badgers: The Road to the Roses,' chronicles the turnaround of the Wisconsin program under coach Barry Alvarez. Hoeppner said he thinks he can do the same at IU, and more importantly, the Wisconsin legend agrees.\n"I don't know Terry that well," Alvarez admitted. "But if I can do it, he can."\nAlvarez, who is retiring as the Badgers' after this season, went 1-10 in his first season at the helm of a then futile Wisconsin program. But just three years later, the Badgers were in the Rose Bowl, and won. \nHoeppner compiled a 48-25 record in six seasons at Miami University of Ohio, and said he's ecstatic to be a part of what he and many other coaches call the "toughest conference in the nation."\nEarlier this week, Hoeppner recalled continually pestering former Miami Athletics Director Joel Maturi to get Miami into the Big Ten.\n"This is the greatest conference in the country," Hoeppner said. "I've always admired it and tried to model my programs after Big Ten teams."\nOf course, Hoeppner followed up with another saying.\n"People want to know what's really realistic. I don't know," he said. "I'm not going to put limits on this team. You've got to play them one at a time, and there's a reason that's an old football adage -- because it's true."\nThe Hoosiers begin that adage with fall practice beginning Monday and the season opener Sept. 2 on the road against Central Michigan -- a game Hoeppner calls "the biggest game of the week"