It didn't take long into his career in the United Shore Professional Baseball League for former Ball State infielder Alex Maloney to receive a phone call from a Major League Organization.
The Ball Brothers Foundation has recently awarded a total of $500,000 in grants to help support the future of doctors and physician training in the Muncie community.
For the seventh straight summer, Music for All brings its national summer music camp to Ball State.
Two central Indiana police officers won’t face charges for shooting a man who they said tried to run them down with his car following an attempted traffic stop.
The Muncie Police Department’s Domestic Violence Unit will begin to sell calendars to fundraise for the unit’s ads around the city.
The new dean of the Honors College has an academic background as diverse as the majors of his students.
A former Ball State student who allegedly choked a store clerk at a Muncie Goodwill and tried to forcibly convert people to Islam has had the charges against him dropped.
Halfway through the summer, stories keep coming in. Take a look at some of the biggest headlines from the Ball State Daily News this past week.
There was a line out the door at the Muncie Animal Shelter on June 23 as people waited to see dogs and cats up for adoption.
ChirpFest officials are being accused of "scamming" local artists and DJs wanting to perform in the upcoming concert.
Editors note: Every year, The Daily News produces the orientation guide for incoming freshman.
Construction is done and now it's time to move in – the furniture that is.
In an effort to address the high population of animals in their care, the City of Muncie Animal Care and Services Department will be hosing a $5 adoption special Friday and Saturday.
Matt Szews travels to the Czech Republic Friday to compete for the International Federation of Volleyball (FIVB) U21 World Championship.
The Ball State Career Center received the Career Services Excellence Award from the National Association of Colleges and Employers.
The famous chirping Scramble Light at Ball State will remain off for the remainder of the summer until classes begin in the fall.
Some call it “adulting,” some call it “frightening,” but most would agree: signing a lease is one of the first grown-up things you can do as a college student.
When Kyleigh Mazer graduated in May, not only did she have a full-time job lined up –she was the CEO of her own company, Bend N' Bright.