Owner of Village Green Records names his top 5 records
By Jason Conerly / April 19, 2015For Record Store Day 2015, the Daily News asked Travis Harvey, Village Green Records owner, what is five favorite records are.
For Record Store Day 2015, the Daily News asked Travis Harvey, Village Green Records owner, what is five favorite records are.
Slavery still exists today. This drives students working on the Ball State English department’s Digital Literature Review, an academic journal produced by undergraduate students in an immersive learning program.
Ashley Caceres is a freshman architecture student at Ball State, but during the summer, she tries on the safety equipment of a working class machine operator.
Surrounded by the click clack sound of amusement rides, Kayla Bell approached the carnival with excitement.
Celebrities enjoy Coachella, ESPN reporter receives suspension
Every year, University Program Board puts on a spring carnival before finals to give students an opportunity to hang out before finals week starts.
We’ll spend a weekend with roommates watching “Scandal”, a few hours in between classes catching up on “Orange Is the New Black” or end a night full of homework with some “House of Cards”. We all have a general idea of what the term “binge watching” means, but what is it really?
The Divine 9 is split into four sororities and five fraternities: Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc., Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority Inc., Zeta Phi Beta Sorority Inc., Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc., Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc., Iota Phi Theta Fraternity Inc., Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity Inc., Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity Inc. and Omega Psi Phi Fraternity Inc.
Ball Jars are one of the many legacies the Ball Brothers left behind, and now there is a unique use for them.
Late Nite Carnival 2015 will feature sixteen rides, a caricature artist, face painters, fireworks and more. Revelers can expect mild temperatures and negligible chances of rain, but eleven years ago, before the first Carnival, Late Nite coordinators weren’t even sure there would be an event.
On the second floor of the Art and Journalism Building, there is a particular hallway where glass display cases containing the work of student artists attract the eyes of students rushing to their next class.
The truth comes out at 8:30 p.m. April 16 in the Student Center Tally, as the kNOw More Secrets project breaks open old diary locks, recovers middle-school poetry and shows off embarrassing childhood artifacts to open up its participants to an audience of support and understanding.
Holocaust survivor Martha Raviv addressed her gathered audience with a thick, Hebrew accent. “In order to tell you my story, I have to tell you the origin,” she said.
Matthew Jones has a recipe for popularity. Step one: acquire a ukulele. Then, play that ukulele anywhere and everywhere. Finally, bask in the attention that follows.
In the final Cave show of the season, Ball State students present an original play written by one of their own.
Modern-day knowledge of the Holocaust comes from books or history classes, but Martha Raviv’s knowledge comes from experience.
Imagine this: graduating from college in four years, debt-free, with an impressive résumé demonstrating involvement, experience and good grades to top it all off. It’s possible to do it on your own, but here are some “college life hacks” to help out with studying, productivity and saving money.
When it comes to fire, some people have the reaction to stop, drop and roll. Kelzie Jo Selch, however, thinks "playtime."
Harry Eggink met with the dean of a college that didn’t yet exist 50 years ago. The College of Architecture and Planning was opening its doors in the fall, and Dean Charles Sappenfieldconvinced Egginkto attend Ball State with promises of a great new college on campus.
The Edmund F. and Virginia B. Ball Endowed Chair schooled her audience on what it means to be a Foley artist who creates sound for cinema and television in Art and Journalism Building Room 175 April 9.