@bsudailynews | www.ballstatedaily.com
WEDNESDAY | JAN. 18, 2017
The Daily News PLANS UNVEILED FOR HEALTH
PROFESSIONS BUILDING 167,100-square-foot building to be built on corner of Riverside Avenue, Martin Street
Joan Todd // Photo Provided
Shown above is a rendering of the new health professions building. The Board of Trustees announced the construction of the new health building on the corner of Riverside and Martin Dec. 16. The building will house the College of Health, a clinic, spaces for classrooms, program spaces and an outdoor quad.
health professions building topping the list. The 167,000-square-foot housands of future students in Ball State’s building will sit on the southeast corner of Riverside College of Health Avenue and Martin Street have big things to look along the upcoming East forward to — with a new Mall, the Board of Trustees Casey Smith & Sara Barker Daily News Reporters
T
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF IPR, WIPB DIES Casey Smith News Editor J. Allan “Al” Rent — a former university official and longtime Muncie icon — died Tuesday afternoon at the age of 73, university spokesperson Joan Todd confirmed to the Daily News. AL RENT Sam Clemmons Rent had served as the WIPB/IPR // executive director and general Photo Provided manager for Indiana Public Radio and WIPB public broadcasting operations at Ball State since 2015. He was also in other leadership positions at the university after graduating from Ball State in 1967. “Everybody wanted to be like Al, and if they couldn’t, they wanted to be around Al,” said Angie Wrapp, the marketing manager for WIPB-TV and Indiana Public Radio. “He just wanted to make everything better.” He was instrumental for getting WIPB created, said Michelle Kinsey, the community engagement coordinator at WIPB-TV and Indiana Public Radio. Rent had worked at the station since he was a student and was on-air the first day WIPB went live. “You would be hard-pressed to find someone in this town that wasn’t impacted in some way by Al Rent,” Kinsey said. “He was the biggest cheerleader in every way possible, and it was just infectious.” An active member in the Muncie community, Rent was known for supporting multiple community organizations, earning him the title of 2010 Star Press Person of the Year. In 2016, Rent was also awarded the Sagamore of the Wabash and the Muncie-Delaware County Chamber of Commerce Legacy Award. “The things he’s done in this community and the changes he’s made will be felt for years and years to come,” Wrapp said. “It’s a huge loss.”
INSIDE
HEALTHY TIPS
FAST FACTS
• Size: 167,000 square-feet • Location: Riverside and Martin Street • Cost: $62.5 million
confirmed Dec. 16. The project is part of a longtime campus master plan that has spanned over the past 10
years, said Interim President Terry King. The building will cost $62.5 million, paid for by issued bonds recently approved by the Board of Trustees. See BUILDING, page 4
FOR THE RECORD
Slacking on your New Year's resolutions? Follow these tips to get back on track. PG 3
MLK UNITY MARCH
Bryan Bullington // Photo Provided
Miss the march? See photos from the event. PG 6
MEN'S BASKETBALL
Cardinals hold off NCAA leading scorer in 98-83 win over Central Michigan. PG 6
ONLINE
RETIREMENT
Joseph Losco, chair of political science department, retires after 14 years.
MLK SPEAKER
Kevin Powell spoke Tuesday on community, civil rights, social media and new activism.
Former Ball State pitcher Bryan Bullington played with the Pittsburgh Pirates, the Cleveland Indians, the Kansas City Royals, the Toronto Blue Jays, the Hiroshima Carp and the Orix Buffaloes. Now, Bullington works with the Milwaukee Brewers as a scouting coach.
Former Ball State, MLB pitcher has lasting legacy Elizabeth Wyman Assistant Sports Editor Editor’s note: “For the Record” is a weekly series featuring former stand-out Ball State athletes and their lives after college. On June 4, 2002, in Fishers, Indiana, Bryan Bullington sits in front of a computer on the second floor of his parents home. He sits between Ball State men’s baseball head coach Rich Maloney and his mom. His dad, overtaken by nerves, is outside pacing in anticipation. Also in the room is his then-girlfriend and nowwife, Lauren, and many other frieds from school. The gathering is to watch the 2002 MLB draft. Bullington, a junior pitcher from Ball State, is projected to be selected in the top three of the first round.
See BULLINGTON, page 5
SERVING BALL STATE UNIVERSITY AND MUNCIE COMMUNITIES SINCE 1922
Bryan Bullington was drafted No. 1 overall out of college