Elon alumna returns to campus to discuss career in politics
Elon University alumna Austin Moore ’22 returned to campus Oct. 1 as a part of the speaker series titled “Alumni Voices: Conversations with Political Insiders on the 2024 Elections.”
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Elon University alumna Austin Moore ’22 returned to campus Oct. 1 as a part of the speaker series titled “Alumni Voices: Conversations with Political Insiders on the 2024 Elections.”
Updated as of 3:31 p.m. on Oct. 1 to include video.
Arthur Brooks, social scientist, bestselling author and columnist for The Atlantic, spoke at Elon’s 2024 Fall Convocation on Sept. 27. Brooks is the author of 13 books as well as a professor at Harvard where he teaches courses on leadership and happiness.
Matthew Clark, professor of biology, said he always had a dream to teach undergraduate students human anatomy. Before Clark was at Elon, he was at East Carolina University, one of his classmates died because of a complication with her brain — influencing him to want to give back to others.
Updated as of 2:50 p.m. on Oct. 2 to include an interactive map.
Arthur C. Brooks is speaking at Fall Convocation at 3 p.m. Sept. 27 in Alumni Gym. Brooks is the Parker Gilbert Montgomery professor of the practice of public and nonprofit leadership at the Harvard Kennedy School and professor of management practice at Harvard Business School.
Updated as of 1:59 p.m. on Sept. 27 to include an additional photos.
An Olympic-sized pool, rock climbing wall, demonstration kitchen and athletic center — all new aspects coming to the HealthEU Building.
In New York, 4,000 miles north of the Amazon, Andrew Lehren, a Pulitzer Prize and Emmy-winning journalist for the New York Times and NBC News Investigations, wanted to find a new way to connect U.S. readers to global deforestation issues.
Elon University is hosting its annual Family Weekend celebrations from Sept. 27 to 29, bringing parents and siblings to campus to reunite with their students.
Updated as of 6:45 p.m. on Sept. 24 to include comment from Provost Rebecca Kohn.
The governor race would have been close if Republican Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson wasn’t an unpopular candidate, Jason Husser, director of Elon Poll, said. The most recent Elon Poll came out Sept. 24, showing 49% of voters favor Democrat Attorney General Josh Stein over Robinson. In contrast, the presidential race is still close and are polling less than one point apart.
In a state where former President Donald Trump won by less than 75,000 votes in 2020, both parties are looking to win over North Carolina through the fastest-growing population in the state — the Hispanic community.
Heather Frazee still remembers the first time she donated blood.
When Elon sophomore Amanda Draznin was in her high school marching band, she felt disconnected from the group. With over 150 members, Draznin said she barely knew the people outside of her section. Now, Draznin is one of 73 students in Elon’s Fire of the Carolina’s marching band.
Updated as of 6:45p.m. on Sept. 26 to provide more clarity on the organizers of the event and include details of a future event hosted by the Chinese Club.
Leah Thomas, author of Elon University’s 2024 common reading book, “The Intersectional Environmentalist: How to Dismantle Systems of Oppression to Protect People + Planet,” spoke Sept. 19 in Alumni Gym as a part of Elon University’s speaker series.
Elon University alumna Yasmeen Lee ’20 spoke to the Elon community about “food equality” and the historical inequities of the North Carolina food system as part of the Data Nexus “Powerful Women in Data” series. The event in LaRose Commons on Sept. 19 highlighted Lee’s work with the Food Insight Group focused on qualitative community-based research that examined how diverse communities engage with food production.
AI has become a topic of debate on college campuses, from professors encouraging and designing projects around the use of AI to others banning it from their classroom. Some classes, such as COM 3340: Politics and Mass Media, have introduced projects that utilize ChatGPT asking it to write analyses based on a student’s notes, while other classes ask that their students refrain from using any AI.
The Latinx-Hispanic Union, more commonly known as LHU, celebrated its seventh birthday as an on-campus organization Sept. 17.