This morning at 9:45 a.m., members of the Muncie community gathered on Ball State’s University Green to remember and honor the lives of the 17 people killed in Parkland Florida one month ago today. Participants came clad in orange, carrying signs and ready to make their voices heard.
The future of Muncie Community Schools — and whether or not it will be in Ball State’s hands — will be decided by midnight Wednesday.
March 14, 2018, marks the 30th anniversary of Pi Day — that’s pi, as in 3.14, not the dessert.
Through a Young Entrepreneurs Across America, or YEAA, internship, freshman computer science major Sean Wolfe is gaining experience by running a business.
Little by little, some Muncie Central High School students left their third period class in remembrance of Parkland shooting victims.
“Hey, Hey! Ho, Ho! Gun violence has got to go!” chanted students and faculty as they lined McKinley Avenue from the Scramble Light to Ball Communications Buildings.
Ball State alumnus Mitch Hannon passed up the clogged streets, deafening noise and bustling walkways of the city to pursue his passion for filmmaking in Indiana.
The Indiana Department of Workforce Development said in a press release that the unemployment rate in Indiana dropped 3.3 percent in January, which is lower than the United States average of 4.1 percent.
Change requires action. Action can be perceived as many different things, from simply just discussing a topic with friends to writing to government officials.
Fresh off a four-match West Coast trip, No. 11 Ball State men's volleyball will dive back into conference competition with a pair of matches against No. 15 Fort Wayne.
Muncie Central High School students will be allowed to participate in a national walkout Wednesday at 10 a.m.
The best-known theoretical physicist of his time, Hawking wrote lucidly of the mysteries of space, time and black holes.
Snow moves out through the overnight hours.
Ball State women’s golf had a rocky weekend, finishing ninth among 13 others in the annual Spring Break Shootout in Dade City, Florida.
For many planning to participate in tomorrow’s protest honoring the lives of the 17 people killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, it will be a demonstration of political outrage, but for others gun violence is more personal. We got to sit down with two important women who are organizing the demonstration and hear about their reasons for speaking out.
Bill and Diane Akers got the call around 1:45 a.m. It was from the hospital saying their son, Andrew “Drew” Akers, a Ball State junior marketing major, had been transported after being hit by a car during spring break.
Here are some easy to make, last minute decorations for your dorm room or apartment to help you celebrate St. Patrick’s Day.