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(01/27/15 2:48am)
Elon Student Government Association's Executive Secretary Matthew Crehan has resigned, citing personal issues. The resignation is effective immediately. Crehan was elected to the position of Executive Secretary in February of 2014.
(01/23/15 6:05pm)
Tobacco farming is on the decline in North Carolina, but all those empty farms won’t be going to waste.
(01/22/15 2:56am)
More than 60 Elon students went to the Four Seasons Mall in Greensboro for the annual Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service gathering.
(01/20/15 3:23am)
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights activists led 50-mile-long marches throughout Alabama and Washington, D.C., and Alamance County's chapter of the NAACP led a two-mile march on Monday to continue their same cause.
(01/11/15 10:12pm)
Article updated 5:50 p.m.
(12/05/14 8:50pm)
Every month, a group of women in Alamance County gather at one woman’s house for a book group. They catch up. One asks how the kids are doing, another how graduate school is treating her, and then they sit down to talk about this month’s book.
(11/25/14 4:53am)
Each year senior music theatre majors need need to raise money to bring casting directors to Elon. With a class of 30, this year students wanted to bring nine directors to Elon. It costs about $2,000 for each director. In addition to selling merchandise like T-shirts and socks, this year the majors are taking off some clothes to fundraise.
(11/24/14 5:27am)
Tanisha Lea knows what it's like to struggle.
(11/20/14 9:29pm)
In the wake of fraternity hazing at West Virginia University, many schools are looking into their own hazing procedures for Greek Life and other campus organizations.
(11/18/14 9:16pm)
In the corner of a dim T-shirt warehouse in Burlington, N.C., surrounded by buckets of colored dye and paint-splattered rotating machines, are rows of broccoli sprouts, barely an inch tall.
(11/17/14 5:03am)
Debbie Stephens has been a chocolatier for 22 years and owns and operates her own store, Once Upon A Chocolate in Gibsonville, N.C. The store is just minutes from campus and offers customers hundreds of unique chocolates for every taste.
(11/17/14 1:40am)
National Hunger and Homeless Awareness Week occurs the week prior Thanksgiving; according to a statistic issued by the Center for the Carolinas, there are 144 people affected by homelessness in Alamance County.
(11/17/14 12:15am)
While some students begin to plan their winter breaks, one Elon senior plans to compete. Senior Yasmine Arrington has many titles to her name: she's a College Fellow, the founder of ScholarCHIPS, and soon, she may be Miss Plus U-S-of-A.
(11/15/14 12:59am)
A trio of suspects: Vanessa Jeanna Snyder, Julia Anna Farias and Allen Harris Jr. were all under charges of human trafficking and sex exploitation of a 19-year-old female in Alamance County. Snyder turned herself into the High Point police department on Thursday, Oct. 30, and Farias was found in Florida and has since been taken into custody. Terry Johnson, the Alamance County police sheriff confirmed that Harris has been located and is being held, with Farias, in Fort Meyers, Fla.
(11/12/14 9:35pm)
According to Sigma Pi, International, the Elon University Epsilon-Theta Chapter has had its charter revoked as of Nov. 11.
(11/12/14 6:45pm)
Please see our updated information here.
(11/12/14 1:51am)
People poured into the office of the Rev. Phil Hardy, pastor at Life’s Journey United Church of Christ in Burlington. It was Spring 2012, and Amendment One, which made it illegal for North Carolina to recognize same-sex marriage, had just passed.
(11/11/14 4:21pm)
He wanted to go, whether they drafted him or not.
(11/05/14 12:59am)
Students at Elon University share their thoughts on North Carolina's tight Senate race that concludes November 4. Who is voting? What are they voting for? And what are some of the challenges in today's politics that matter to them?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UNLojc3GHC8&feature=youtu.be
(11/04/14 5:41am)
Although there have been regular rain showers in Alamance County, precipitation in the area may not be enough. The Triad has seen 30 percent less rainfall than normal and have listed the area as abnormally dry on the U.S. Drought Monitor, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.