Electric Crayon Records opens as a safe space for students and those suffering with addiction in Muncie
Music has been said to bring people of all ages together, and at Electric Crayon Records, it’s no different.
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Music has been said to bring people of all ages together, and at Electric Crayon Records, it’s no different.
You must be 18 years or older. You must weigh more than 110 pounds. You must be in good health.
Euchre nights, cemetery visits, ax throwing, aerial aerobics, glass blowing workshops and community volunteering. This is what it’s like to be a part of Tri Kappa Muncie.
While the experience of every woman in sports media is different, Dana Benbow, Betsy Ross and Elyse Timpe, three women in sports media, all shared one circumstance in common: having to prove themselves to men.
Five children in a high stakes battle. Who can play piano the best and win the cookie?
Editor's Note: KwaTashea Marfo, one of the writers of this story, has an African American studies minor.
In the corner of Hailey Maupin’s second-grade classroom, shelves of light blue buckets filled with books sit under a bench, waiting for children to take the opportunity to travel into another world.
On the corner of South Cherry and West Adams, husky howls and barking can be heard in the air, though usually only for a few minutes. On that corner in downtown Muncie, sits Amy’s Pet Spa.
With 52 percent of Americans’ New Year’s resolutions being to exercise more, according to Statistica, and 12 percent of new gym members starting in January, according to RunRepeat, gyms have been filling up. This means new people to fitness centers, some who don’t know the “unwritten rules” of the gym. Here are five rules of gym etiquette for all those visiting the gym.
For the last couple years, COVID-19 has been an excuse for dismissing travel plans due to borders being closed and high chances of getting sick. Though COVID-19 is still a problem all over the world, life is beginning to return to normal, and with that, more study abroad opportunities are opening. While some study abroad programs are still getting back on their feet, according to the International Education Exchange, 83 percent of institutions reported an increase in study abroad numbers for the 2022-23 school year compared to the previous year.
Seagraves doubted himself at first, but he knew taking the risk to apply for the grant would be worth it and that the process would teach him a lot. He said he spent more time on the application than any paper he’d ever written for school.
Glue-covered hands work away on a colorful project on construction paper. Small untied shoes pitter patter across the classroom. Markers and crayons roll onto the desks of each student.
Editor's Note: This story talks about nutrition and mentions eating disorders
The reason Ball State's first Astronomy Slam survived COVID-19: a trophy.
Little Bird
Editor’s Note: The Ball State Daily News exercises editorial independence over our content. The Ball State Daily is the social media presence for McKinley Ave. Agency, the advertising and PR agency that operates through the School of Journalism and Strategic Communications. The Daily News newspaper, as well as all other student media, is partially funded through the advertising the Agency sells, as well as through donations and university funds.
As the fall 2021 semester comes to an end, roughly 1,500 Ball State seniors are preparing to graduate and head into different work fields, said Angel Tuttle, assistant director of commencement and university events.
On Nov. 11, Ball State hosted Ashely Ford, Ball State alumna and author of “Somebody's Daughter,” in the final event of the Fall 2021 Writer-in-Residence program.
The Entrepreneurial Leadership Institute hosted its inaugural Innovation Day, also known as I-Day, in honor of Global Entrepreneurship Week. I-Day took place at Ball State’s Oakwood Building and included a series of events for high school students from the Muncie area. Students from Burris Laboratory School, Daleville Junior/Senior High School and Muncie Central High School took part in the event Nov. 10.
Lila Fierek is a sophomore news journalism major and writes “[Hey There Duh-Lila]” for The Daily News. Her views do not necessarily reflect those of the newspaper.