Where does it go?: Ball State has a complex relationship with recycling.
By Antonia Liakas / April 30, 2025Ball State has a complex relationship with recycling.
Ball State has a complex relationship with recycling.
Known locally as Frank’s Foundry, the former industrial site is looking to evolve.
Muncie thrift stores work to give used items a second chance.
Fashion 299x gives students a sustainable opportunity.
A deep dive into how much water is used to make everyday objects.
Ball State theater professors describe sustainability efforts within the department.
Food insecurity runs deep in muncie, but community efforts offer hope.
My identity isn’t a single story and neither is yours.
Local volunteer firefighters reflect on serving their communities.
Three music composers describe a childhood love evolving into a future career.
Community members and organizations collaborate to help clean up the White River.
A Ball State student channels her passion for crochet and beading into a small business.
I am worth something, and I want them to know.
The year was 1996, and Muncie’s two largest newspapers, the Muncie Morning Star and the Muncie Evening Press, merged into one: The Star Press. By 2011, this paper would become the only source of daily news in Delaware County.
As presidential elections come and go, my community is often overlooked.
Muncie has a complex history with redlining* that still deeply impacts its residents today.
The complexity of Muncie's homeless citizens presents challenges to local nonprofits.
Addiction and drug use has remained prevalent in the Muncie community.
Three women leaders in Muncie are championing empowerment and change.
Since the summer of 2017, Twisted Twigs has been offering crystals, handmade oils, dried herbs, incense, and other homemade apothecary items to their customers. The shop is nestled amongst residential houses on Main Street in Anderson, Indiana, and is owned and operated by two witches: Brytneigh Burgess and Kinsley Elsten.