History
Municipal Stories Archive:
- Crack-Up at the City Building
- SBA Investigation Leaves More Questions than Answers, City Continues to Evade Public Discourse
- City of Muncie Removes Comment Section, Moves Discussion to Separate Page
- Union Busting w/ Dan, Enthusiasm for Land Banking, and Horrible 4th of July Traffic Expected
- Jeff Howe’s Contract Posted Online
- Institutional Barriers
- City Tries Skipping Bargaining Agreements with City Employees
- Ridenour Administration Holding Luxury Retreat Outside City Limits, and Retreating from Ethics.
- Dirty Partisans
- MRC Reorganizes Again After Council Appointments
- Ridenour Controlled MRC Has One Last Hurrah
- Dale Basham Lies About BOT Document, Post-Democrat Will Pay $50 if He Can Provide a Copy
- What to Expect From Next Week’s City Council Meeting
- Tenants Scrambling to Find Housing After Muncie Inn Ordered to be Vacated
- Man of the Hour: How Bob Cunningham Fought Muncie’s Political Duopoly
- Council Delays Appointments, Amends Firehouse Resolution
- Council Votes Jerry Dishman as New President
- Bike Lane Proposal Is A No Go
- Six Council Members Sworn In
- Put In Perspective: That Time Muncie Republicans Wanted to Privatize the Fire Department
LGBTQ+ Stories Archive:
"The Muncie Project" '60s - '70s
When BSU gained its status as a public university in 1965, students were encouraged to focus their theses and dissertations on topics pertaining to Muncie and the Middletown studies. Faculty members like Dwight Hoover and Everitt Ferrill were passionate in this effort.
- A Content Analysis of the Editorial Opinion of the Muncie Star, 1935-1944
- George R. Dale, Crusader For Free Speech and Free Press
- The Legal Problems of a Liberal in Middletown During the 1920’s
- Courtland Madison Asher, Editor and Publisher of the X-Ray: Seditionist, Extremist, or Patriot?
- Politics in Middletown: A Reconsideration of Municipal Government and Community Power in Muncie, Indiana, 1925-1935
- The Development of Federated Fundraising in Muncie, Indiana, 1925-1957
- Profile in Progress: A History of Local 287, UAW-CIO