DCI comes to campus Friday
June 25, 2014Seven professional drum corps will compete Friday at Ball State as the culmination of a week’s worth activities at Music For All’s Summer Symposium.
Seven professional drum corps will compete Friday at Ball State as the culmination of a week’s worth activities at Music For All’s Summer Symposium.
Read about five things to know June 26.
After finding mold in Village Promenade, the company says it removed the mold, got rid of damaged items and started over.
Same-sex couples lined up to marry in Indiana, following a decision by a federal district court judge Wednesday.
A couple who met in a friend’s boutique will open their own take on women’s clothing in the Village this fall.
A federal judge struck down Indiana's ban on same-sex marriage today, ruling that gay couples have the same marriage rights as couples of opposing genders.
About two-thirds of Indiana’s 2012 high school graduates went to college in the year after high school graduation, according to a new Indiana Department of Education study.
Read about five things to know June 23 from The Associated Press.
Wide-eyed high school students packed into Sursa Hall on Saturday for the first day of a national band camp on Ball State’s campus.
For a small, devoted group of students, Summer Semester serves as a 10-week chance to complete the four-semester foreign language requirement.
Some people don't remember the skepticism Jo Ann Gora faced when she was named Ball State’s president a decade ago.
Amazon unveiled its first smartphone ever Wednesday, a device that assists shoppers by using six cameras that can make sense of its user’s face and the world around it.
In what truly epitomized the title of his TV show, “My Cat From Hell,” feline behaviorist Jackson Galaxy is calling his attempt to tame the Portland cat notorious for attacking a baby and boxing his panicked owners into a bedroom “the hardest case I have ever worked.”
Environmentalists in Illinois expected a battle royal over their call for a statewide ban on “microbeads," tiny bits of plastic used in personal care products such as facial scrubs and toothpaste that are flowing by the billions into the Great Lakes and other waterways.
Find out five things happening in Indiana for June 19.
Find out the top news for June 19.
While two cases of fraud have made a $13 million dent on long-term reserves, Ball State officials say the university is focused on recovering the assets, holding people accountable and implementing procedures to avoid the situation in the future.
Buses filled with hundreds of high school students will flood campus starting Saturday and will be closely followed by the sound of booming trumpets and snapping drums.
A Brooklyn, New York, man was sentenced to three years in prison for his role in an investment fraud scheme that cost Ball State $13.1 million.
Indiana’s manufacturing industry’s health continues to receive A-level ratings for the sixth year in a row and continues to outperform its neighbors in most areas, a new report shows.