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The Muncie Star was founded in 1899 and the Muncie Evening Press was founded in 1905. [14] [31] A new public library, which was a Carnegie library project, was dedicated on January 1, 1904, and served as the main branch of the city's public library system. [32] The forerunner to Ball State University also arrived at the turn of the twentieth ...
The nickname "Athens of the Prairie" was bestowed on Columbus, Indiana, due to the large assemblage of contemporary architecture and public sculpture in the city, including Henry Moore's "Large Arch." Albion – Gateway to the Chain O' Lakes [citation needed] Auburn - Home of the Classics [3] Bedford – Stone City [4] Bloomington. B-Town [5] [6]
Pages in category "Muncie, Indiana" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Academy of Model ...
Muncie is moving in the right direction but it needs to learn to dream without limitation. "Unity does not mean uniformity," Anderson said of the need for tolerance and respect for people who don ...
Psi Iota Xi was founded on September 19, 1897 in Muncie, Indiana by five high school students and three teachers at Central High School. [1] [2] [3] Its founders wanted to bring diverse art and music experiences to their community; later, its mission expanded its scope to include literature and literacy.
The Munsee originally occupied the headwaters of the Delaware River in present-day New York, [2] New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, [1] extending south to the Lehigh River, and also held the west bank of the Hudson River from the Catskill Mountains nearly to the New Jersey line.
MUNCIE, Ind. — City police said a Muncie man was shot Wednesday after he allegedly tried to steal a car. Branden Dane Harless, 23 — who suffered a gunshot wound in one of his arms — was also ...
White River (Indiana) is a translation of the Miami-Illinois waapikaminki ("at the white waters"), possibly a reference to the rapids at Broad Ripple. [60] Winamac, Indiana, is named for Winamac a Potawatomi chief. The word is said to mean "catfish." [61] Wyandot or Wyandotte - From Wyandot people, also known historically as the Huron.