Homecoming week at Ball State: Your event check-list
By Amanda Belcher / September 27, 2015Ball State Homecoming week 2015 kicks off Sept. 28, and this year’s “Greatest Show on Turf” circus theme will be prevalent in many of the week’s events.
Ball State Homecoming week 2015 kicks off Sept. 28, and this year’s “Greatest Show on Turf” circus theme will be prevalent in many of the week’s events.
An increasing number of college students can’t afford nutritious food. One Ball State organization tries to fix the food insecurity problem in Muncie by starting its own food
Fall is officially here. Enjoy the season with these nearby hiking and walking trails.
Village Green Records will be hosting a good vibe-filled fundraiser on Sept. 25 that is intended to bring “awareness to the positive impact dance has on the world.”
Financial instability and prioritizing personal aspirations over materialist goals leads many Millennials to return home before venturing out on their own
"Election day is basically a holiday to you."
After months of work-shopping, the winner of Ball State’s first Discovery New Musical Theatre Festival, will be brought to life by the staff and students of the Department of Theatre and Dance.
A local dubstep DJ and producer who has been creating music since high school will be celebrating the release of his first album with a show at Be Here Now Saturday Sept. 26.
After the recession in 2007, it's been harder and harder for young graduates with little experience to get recognized by employers. Coupled with an increase in the cost of living and a sharper increase in the amount of debt accumulated, many Millennials and their parents are finding it easier and more financially stable to move back in together.
Stevie Hahn isn’t always himself. Sometimes, he’s Ray Toffer, the deadpanning host of Beautiful Luxurious Muncie, a YouTube series on Hahn’s channel that sarcastically highlights Muncie locations.
Morgan Smotherman wasn’t comfortable with the concept of sex, at least not when she started college. She didn't want to talk about it and thought it was disgusting.
The 67th annual Emmy Awards honored the best in television on Sept. 20. Take a look at the biggest winners and losers of the evening.
The line to get into the first ever ChirpFest wrapped around the block Saturday night. The electronic dance music festival on North Dill Street attracted about 3,500 people, according to organizer Darius Norwood and partner Alex Smith.
Bikes are cumbersome, longboards require practice and walking is slow work. Then there is the “hoverboard.”
Ball State students thought they were going to hear a lecture on how to make it in show business. Instead they received a dose of reality and some frank advice from a Hollywood veteran.
Josh Cooper, a 34-year-old pastor at Bridge Community Church, reflects on the way he engages other Millennials in the church
“I sometimes start speaking another language without even realizing it.”
Experience isn’t required at the upcoming skate clinic for Muncie’s local roller derby team, but a mouth guard definitely is. Members of the Cornfed Derby Dames will teach potential skaters the basics of roller derby and debunk some myths about the sport on Sept. 20 at the Gibson Skating Arena in Muncie.
The first-ever ChirpFest, an electronic dance music festival thrown in the Village and organized almost entirely by two Ball State students, will be held Sept. 19.
Generation Y is making church leaders work harder to recruit young people into their congregations