Get to know the 12 candidates for the open IU Board of Trustees alumni-elected position
12 candidates will run for the open alumni position on the IU Board of Trustees. The election begins at 12:01 a.m. June 1 and ends at 10 a.m. June 28.
30 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
12 candidates will run for the open alumni position on the IU Board of Trustees. The election begins at 12:01 a.m. June 1 and ends at 10 a.m. June 28.
President Trump’s budget request for fiscal year 2021 proposes a 12% increase in overall funding to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The budget introduces several notable changes to NASA’s funding, including a 46% increase in space exploration to land a crewed mission on the moon by 2024.
The newly constructed Metz Carillon, an instrument made of bells in a tower that cost $7 million, will be rung on Monday in celebration of IU’s bicentennial.
IU professor Elinor “Lin” Ostrom was a woman of many firsts: the first woman to win the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, the first person honored at IU-Bloomington with an Bicentennial Historical Marker for her achievements and the first woman to have her own statue at IU.
The path to working at a rare books library is not as simple as enjoying books. The Indiana Daily Student sat down with librarians in the Lilly Library’s Slocum Room to talk about what schooling and experience can help one get a job at with a rare books collection.
Like many other freshmen, I’ve gone through my fair share of major-related existential crises. At one point during the fall, I became so stressed about practicality and post-graduation job prospects that I nearly switched from studying English to biology. Recently, there’s been a huge cultural push to encourage students to develop an interest in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) fields.
When people think of autism, some make an unfortunate connection with vaccines. But a recent breakthrough in autism research will allow scientists to start answering questions about the disease’s causes — and vaccines aren’t one of them.
Attendees who arrived too late to get a seat in the auditorium crowded around monitors to listen to President McRobbie’s speech.
From IDS reports
IU’s Vice President for Research Jorge José and Vice President for International Affairs David Zaret took the first steps to creating collaborations with the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.
A new IU study has tracked links between early language skills and subsequent behavior problems in young children.
The word “phantom” can describe an illusion, but there is no mistaking the results of the Phantom, a force feedback virtual reality device developed in part by professor Geoffrey Bingham, that helps treat youth with Developmental Coordination Disorder.
I would call it a socially interactive robot, or maybe an assistive robot. We were interested in helping people who work on computer jobs to take more regular breaks, because what we realized was that when you’re working on a computer job you can kind of forget that you have a body, basically.
I would call it a socially interactive robot, or maybe an assistive robot. We were interested in helping people who work on computer jobs to take more regular breaks, because what we realized was that when you’re working on a computer job you can kind of forget that you have a body, basically.
29-year-old IU doctoral student Randy Hubach never forgets that he lives with an incurable, and sometimes deadly, infection. In 2002, he tested positive for human immunodeficiency virus.
Twenty-one IU-Bloomington faculty members received Collaborative Research and Creative Funding awards by the Office of the Vice Provost for Research.
Elinor Ostrom condensed four decades of tireless economic legwork to 30 minutes in her Nobel Lecture.
President Obama won the Nobel Peace Prize. Great. Now can we please, as a society, move on? There are five other Nobels given out each year to people who have actually done good work in the service of mankind.
With his new book “Play,” Stuart Brown, founder of the National Institute for Play, has thrust playtime back into the national spotlight. but why is it so important? To find out, we sought out IU experts to talk about the benefits of a playful life at every age.
Art and creativity are intertwined, but where does innovation stem from? To find out, we asked student artists what inspires them to create.