Elon University recognized by Institute of International Education
Updated as of 12:03 p.m. on Nov. 17 to include comment from Dean of Global Education Nick Gozick.
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Updated as of 12:03 p.m. on Nov. 17 to include comment from Dean of Global Education Nick Gozick.
Invicta Water, a private water treatment company, is working to remove PFAS from water sources along with the help of Elon students.
Elon University’s Center for Race, Ethnicity and Diversity Education hosted a beading workshop, as well as an Indigenous digital art showcase, as part of its Native American and Indigenous Heritage Month celebration.
A woman had overdosed before and was saved by Narcan, but this time she was alone. When her mother found her, she tried performing CPR, but she had already died.
The launch date for the permanent plaza in downtown Elon has been set for 6 p.m. Dec. 2, according to Elon’s Downtown Development Director Jill Weston.
The former Culp Weaving Mill continues to burn after fire crews from across central North Carolina — including Alamance, Guilford and Orange Counties — responded to a fire at 300 E. Parker St. in Graham overnight Nov. 12.
The ruins of the former Culp Weaving Mill smolder on Nov. 14 in Graham as hotspots continue to burn below. This comes after a three-alarm fire at the complex on Nov. 12 which continued overnight into Nov. 13.
The ruins of the former Culp Weaving Mill smolder on Nov. 14 in Graham as hotspots continue to burn below. This comes after a three-alarm fire at the complex on Nov. 12 which continued overnight into Nov. 13.
A hotspot continues to burn inside the ruins of the former Culp Weaving Mill on Nov. 14 in Graham following a three-alarm fire at the complex on Nov. 12, which continued overnight into Nov. 13. "Everything's burning underneath it. So it's a matter of just its gonna have to burn itself out or we continue to put water on it," Graham Fire Chief Tommy Cole said.
CORRECTION: A previous version of this article stated that full-time Registered Nurse Becky Amash would begin work in January. She began work in October. Elon News Network regrets this error.
A panel of Elon University’s multifaith chaplains gathered in the Sacred Space of the Numen Lumen Pavilion on Nov. 13 to make connections through hard discussions and to seek guidance from tradition. The panelists discussed the Israel-Hamas war and how to navigate the conversations around it, particularly with the holidays drawing near.
In her sophomore year, now junior Laney Lynch was sitting in an acting class when she got the idea to write “Cardboard Boxes.” Lynch said the class was going over Anton Chekhov, a 19th century Russian playwright whose work included Elon University’s 2022 spring play “The Cherry Orchard.”
Updated as of 5:24 p.m. on Nov. 14 to include comment from project engineer Brent Mills.
CORRECTION: A previous version of this article spelled senior Emma Puleo's name incorrectly. Elon News Network regrets this error.
Brook Goldstein slowly opens a lantern above her head during a dance rehearsal in Scott Studios. Goldstein is rehearsing in preparation for her performance in "Where Does The Light Go," a piece choreographed by junior Hannah Harris which will debut in the 2023 BFA Dance Choreography Showcase on Thursday Nov. 13.
Sunrise on Nov. 13 reveals what is left of the Culp weaving mill in Graham, North Carolina, at 300 East Parker St. after a three-alarm fire ripped through the complex beginning during the evening on Nov. 12. Fire departments from Guilford, Alamance and Orange Counties responded. This comes a little more than a year after an October 2022 fire occured at the same complex.
Fire crews from across central North Carolina — including Alamance, Guilford and Orange Counties — responded to a fire at 300 E. Parker St. in Graham at around 8 p.m. on Nov. 12. Crews worked throughout the night to get the fire under control, with hot spots remaining into Nov. 13.
Senior Mandi Lichtenstein started to feel symptoms during the first week of school. As symptoms got worse Lichtenstein knew something was wrong so she decided to drive herself to the hospital on Aug. 29.
Firefighters from the Graham Fire Department put out hot spots after a three-alarm fire ripped through the abandoned Culp Weaving textile plant at 300 E. Parker St. on Nov. 13.
Sunrise on Nov. 13 reveals what is left of the Culp weaving mill in Graham at 300 E. Parker St. after a three-alarm fire ripped through the complex beginning during the evening on Nov. 12. Fire departments from Guilford, Alamance and Orange Counties responded. This comes a little more than a year after an October 2022 fire occured at the same complex.