Elon Community Garden celebrates 10th anniversary at Annual Strawberry Festival
Elon Community members gathered together Monday afternoon at the Elon Community Garden for the Annual Strawberry Festival.
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Elon Community members gathered together Monday afternoon at the Elon Community Garden for the Annual Strawberry Festival.
Tragedy struck Ecuador in the form of a 7.8-magnitude earthquake, prompting Elon University students to take action. Despite tremendous relief efforts and searches within the country, there were more than 650 casualties and 16,000 injuries. Reeling from news of the horrifying humanitarian crisis, countries around the world responded by sending food, clothing and money to the survivors.
Tragedy struck Ecuador April 16 in the form of a 7.8-magnitude earthquake. Despite tremendous relief efforts and searches within the country, there were more than 650 casualties and 16,000 injuries. Reeling from news of the horrifying humanitarian crisis, countries around the world responded by sending food, clothing and money to the survivors.
Elon community members wore denim clothing Wednesday in solidarity and support of victims of sexual assault.
It’s not hard to recognize the causes of stress and anxiety. Mounting academic and professional pressures reinforced by the expectations of parents can wear down the psyche.
Roughly 50 students and faculty attended todays Environmental Science Oral Presentation Session held in the Moseley Centers McKinnon E conference room.
Roughly 40 faculty and students gathered in Moseley 215 Tuesday, for a Spring Undergraduate Research Forum (SURF) symposium presented by the Program for Ethnographic Research and Community Studies.
Party for the Planet, an Eco-Reps-coordinated event, was an installment of the Elon Earth Week celebration. Aligned with the goals of prior events, the April 22 Party for the Planet promoted eco-friendly living, celebrated the beauties of the natural world and inspired attendees to strive for a healthier planet.
El Salvador, Honduras, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Pakistan are examples of four countries rife with acts of unspeakable violence, often carried out by the likes of rebel militant forces run amok, drug cartel members, or radical terrorist organizations.
U.S. college students are more than twice as likely to die on their own campus than while studying abroad, according to a study conducted by The Forum on Education Abroad. The study reported 13.5 students out of every 100,000 die abroad each year.
Within an hour of the March 22 Brussels attacks, #StopIslam started trending on Twitter. The trend reflected a larger societal issue in which innocent Muslims are targeted for the actions of a radicalized minority.
Bruce Hall, associate professor of African and African-American studies at Duke University, gave a lecture Wednesday night in Lakeside Meeting Room 213 titled “Vernacular Media and Muslim Ethics in Northern Mali.”
In a period spanning nearly 220 years, the people of the United States elected 43 white men to lead the country. Then, in January of 2009, President Barack Obama’s election broke the mold.
Tyler Gammon looked left and stared down the barrel of a gun. The voice behind the pointed weapon yelled, “Get the [expletive] out of the car, or I’m going to blow your brains out.”
CHARLOTTE — Democratic presidential candidate and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrived Monday night at Grady Cole Center eager to deliver one final speech to North Carolina voters before the state's Tuesday primary.
Last Updated: Wednesday, March 16 at 2:40 p.m.
Since the mid-1990s, HIV testing and preventive interventions have caused a 90 percent decline in the number of children perinatally infected with HIV, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But for Cynthia Fair, Elon University professor of human services studies and public health studies coordinator, there is still room for further progress.
Elon University and The Burlington Times-News partnered for its final Community Connections installment of the academic year Monday night, “Education, Race and Ethnicity in Alamance County and Beyond.”
U.S. voters argue that the media is more biased against Republican frontrunner Donald Trump than against Democratic front runner Hillary Clinton, according to a Rasmussen Reports poll conducted in December 2015.
Biologist Meg Lowman visited Elon University’s McCrary Theatre Wednesday night to deliver a presentation titled, “Out on a Limb."