Freshman Lowell Oakley takes on 'The Voice' with Team Pharrell
He only packed one change of clothes.
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He only packed one change of clothes.
From a nationwide pool of thousands dreaming of record deals, freshman Lowell Oakley has made the cut to advance to the blind audition portion of the NBC hit singing competition, "The Voice."
“It was like everything was just over.”
Torrential rainfall struck again at this year’s Spring Show, headlined by B.o.B. and The Chainsmokers, but the event planners — the Student Union Board — had to deal with an additional challenge: This year’s show was outside.
The Experiential Learning Requirement (ELR) at Elon University allows students to combine knowledge learned in class with experiences outside the classroom. Students may satisfy this requirement by completing an internship, studying abroad, conducting independent research, participating in service learning or holding a leadership position. By the time graduation rolls around, most students have completed multiple ELRs.
In kindergarten, Elon University alumnus Tyler Bertolone stood nervously on the back of the stage with his hands in his pockets in his first performance, “The Wizard of Oz.”
The Elon Musical Theater Class of 2015 (MT ’15) is channeling its inner child with its upcoming cabaret. The Disney cabaret, “Anything Can Happen,” will take place at 6:30 and 8 p.m. March 19 and 20 in the Black Box Theatre.
As the lights dimmed, Yeager Recital Hall began to fill with performers dressed in variations of red and black. Once again, Elon Cares 2014 kicked off the show with songs preaching a message of unity, love and to not be afraid to be yourself. A solo guitarist started the show off with the ever popular “Here Comes the Sun.”
Now that graduation day has come and gone, the Elon University Class of 2013 is preparing for its next steps. Some are headed to graduate school, some just landed their first job and others are still on the lookout for that opportunity. For one student, the future is the Broadway stage.
Check out the audio slideshow of this event here.
The arts can provide an outlet for people to express their inner emotions, struggles and triumphs. In the words of Tami Kress, the founder of Burlington’s new Studio 1, “They allow people the opportunity to collaborate and to work together and to create.”
Henry Longfellow, a 19th-century American poet, once called music “the universal language of mankind.” Music has the ability to bring people together and unite them through their love for music. Junior Elisabeth Bassen said this is her favorite part about the Elon University Electric Ensemble.
Jess Dugan described various details of her identity, such as how she was prom king in high school, before showing her artwork April 15 in the Isabella Cannon Room at Elon University. She said she feels it’s important to show her own identity before beginning a presentation of her photography.
Rebel Wilson continued to break into the U.S. movie community Sunday night as she hosted the MTV Movie Awards. She used her on-the-spot comedy as well as her slapstick humor to open the show with a fake double nip-slip.
Secrets will creep around the stage April 11 in Elon University’s McCrary Theatre.
Rumor on the talk show street is that Barbara Walters will be making her final TV appearance in May 2014. ABC’s daytime talk show, “The View,” will make a formal announcement this May, various sources have reported. Walters, 83, has battled numerous health issues during the past few years, including heart surgery in 2010.
When Sweet Signatures, Elon University’s all-female a cappella group, walked on stage in black blazers, heels and bright colored shirts, the crowd went wild.
A concert at the Front Street Public House in downtown Burlington Thursday included four instruments: a kazoo, harmonica, guitar and tambourine. But there was just one person on stage.
The auditorium fell silent. Four musicians walked on stage – Dmitri Pogorelov, Jean Hatmaker, Ai Ishia and Francois Henkins – carrying violins, a viola and a cello. The group sat and raised their bows. With one unified breath the quartet began to play.
While Colleen Choquette-Raphael was in graduate school, she was the only female in her class. Her class often had critiques on their work and she was told one day not to create any work with flowers.