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Fans pack the stands at the 2017 Hoosier Hysteria in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. In a statement Wednesday, the Big Ten announced that fans will be allowed at conference sporting events for the remainder of the season.
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Fans pack the stands at the 2017 Hoosier Hysteria in Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. In a statement Wednesday, the Big Ten announced that fans will be allowed at conference sporting events for the remainder of the season.
Gov. Eric Holcomb speaks at a press conference at the Indiana State House in Indianapolis on Oct. 10, 2017. Holcomb delivered his 2021 State of the State address Tuesday.
Former representative and Indiana attorney general candidate Todd Rokita speaks with the press after hearing Vice President Mike Pence speak at the Wylam Center of Flagship East on April 19, 2018, in Anderson, Indiana. Rokita tested positive for COVID-19 on Tuesday, Election Day.
Gov. Eric Holcomb speaks at the press conference on the opioid crisis initiative at the Indiana State House on Oct. 10, 2017, in Indianapolis.
Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb, speaks at a press conference on the opioid crisis initiative at the Indiana State House on Oct. 10, 2017, in Indianapolis. Holcomb is running for reelection in 2020 as the incumbent candidate.
People pack into Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall for Hoosier Hysteria on Oct. 21, 2017. IU Athletics has announced furloughs for some employees to help with budget constraints due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Former Indiana player Victor Oladipo speaks to the crowd after getting recognized prior to the Hoosiers' game against the Purdue Boilermakers onFeb. 11, 2018, at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall in Bloomington, Indiana. It was Oladipo's first time back since his career ended with Indiana.
Gov. Eric Holcomb speaks Sept. 22, 2017, at the Wylam Center of Flagship East in West Lafayette, Indiana. Holcomb declared a state of emergency in Indiana on March 6 after the first Indiana resident tested positive for coronavirus.
Paul Post arrives at work on morning of Nov. 21 as a Bloomington Police Officer. His morning routine starts in the pitch darkness of him and his wife's bedroom. His routine takes him through his dimly lit house and to his car. Post has to arrive to the station by 5:30 a.m. for roll call.
Paul Post speaks to the city council about the agreement between the Fraternal Order of Police and the City of Bloomington on Dec. 4.
Paul Post sits waiting for the salary ordinance to come on the agenda during city council on Dec. 4. Paul had been working on the agreement with the city as head of the Fraternal Order of Police for more than a year.
Paul Post poses for a portrait outside City Council on Dec. 4. The council meeting later in the evening would have the salary ordinance that Paul had been working on as head of the Fraternal Order of Police for over a year.
Kristy Post ties up the hair of Ali Post while they returned for a few minutes before heading to cheer practice. Paul Post, in the mean time, bakes a cake for his wife Kristy at their home in Bloomington.
Paul Post talks to his wife Kristy while she is home shortly before having to leave to take their daughter Ali to cheer practice Nov. 4. Paul had spent the afternoon baking Kristy a cake for her birthday, which they hoped to enjoy later that night.
Kristy Post laughs at the family dinner table Nov. 23 at her home in Bloomington. Kristy, Paul, daughter Alli and son Wyatt frequently spend family dinner together.
Paul Post pulls out of his driveway on the morning of Nov. 21. Post has to arrive to the station by 5:30 a.m. for roll call at the Bloomington Police Station.
Paul Post stands in the kitchen of his home Nov. 21. Post has to arrive to the station by 5:30 a.m. for roll call at the Bloomington Police Station.
Paul Post's uniform and equipment is seen sitting atop his dresser at his Bloomington home. During his morning routine to work he frequently gets ready in this part of his bedroom in the dark to make it to 5:30 a.m. roll call while his wife still sleeps.
Paul, Kristy, Ali and Wyatt Post pray before their family dinner at their home in Bloomington. The Post household represents law enforcement in many of the rooms including the walls in the dining room.
City Council Members Susan Sandberg, right, and Chris Sturbaum, left, listen to Fraternal Order of Police members representing the police force at a city council meeting Sept. 18. The union pleads their case to the council amidst a long and complicated year of negotiations.