Spring issue: Our money. Their secrets.
For the past five months, the staff members at Ball Bearings Magazine have been trying to answer the question: Where does our money go?
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For the past five months, the staff members at Ball Bearings Magazine have been trying to answer the question: Where does our money go?
When I was in high school, applying for scholarships became a part-time job. I would lay out all the forms on a table, and meticulously fill in whatever they needed. I spent nights after school writing essays. I looked on websites for them. I reviewed past scholarship recipients to see what credentials they looked for.
At a projected 75.3 million, Millennials have surpassed the Baby Boomer generation, now projected at 74.9 million people. For the first time in years, a new generation – the largest generation – is on the way to changing America. Editor-in-Chief Miranda Carney and Executive Editor Kaitlyn Arford discuss their print magazine, “ We Are Coming.” The magazine will be on stands starting November 2.
Joining a group of environmental and social activists on or off campus is one way to connect with the environment. If you want to get involved in work that impacts the Muncie community, and may even extend to national and international scales, start here.
Continue reading at BallBearingsMag.com Also, follow us on Twitter @ballbearings
Millie Gibson is an exchange student from Keele University in England. Gibson was originally only staying for the fall semester, but she ended up extending her stay until May 2015. By Maggie Kenworthy / Ball Bearings
As soon as the pregnancy test turned positive, Alexis Major started crying and panicking.
Women are certainly not a rare sight on college campuses, especially at Ball State, where women make up nearly 60 percent of undergrads. But when it comes to pursuing degrees in STEM – science, technology, engineering and math – fields, classrooms across the country are filled with a disproportionally low amount of women.
Walking around campus with their heads bent, students tap away on their phones. They are nearly bumping into people or poles, strolling off the sidewalk or into the road. You’ve seen one or been one: a distracted walker.
Just as the glass appeared to harden, Alex Dils dipped it into a nearby oven before returning to his workbench. As he carefully pressed metal tools to the side of his newly formed genie vase, the Robin Williams tribute piece shattered into cobalt-shaded fragments.
Walking around campus with their heads bent, students tap away on their phones. They are nearly bumping into people or poles, strolling off the sidewalk or into the road. You’ve seen one or been one: a distracted walker.