Review: Improv group shines in Homecoming Weekend performance
A Port-a-Potty. Dentures. Kanye West. And a goth. Yeager Recital Hall featured all of these things at Instant Laughter’s fourth annual Homecoming Weekend performance Oct.
A Port-a-Potty. Dentures. Kanye West. And a goth. Yeager Recital Hall featured all of these things at Instant Laughter’s fourth annual Homecoming Weekend performance Oct.
Choreography I and II students showcased their choreography projects Oct. 16-17 for small audiences in the Center for the Arts during the fall Choreography Salon.
This past weekend, Elon University’s Renegade Productions presented “Frozen,” Bryony Lavery’s play that follows the lives of three people — a mother, a serial killer and a psychiatrist — who become intertwined after the disappearance of a young girl. Renegade, an Elon organization for student-written or directed theatrical productions, provides an outlet for all majors to produce, design and perform all forms of theater. The show’s director, senior Cody Schmidt, brought the play to Renegade’s attention after he read the show a year ago. “I was looking for something to direct and stumbled upon the script again,” Schmidt said.
Standing on one of the thousands of pagodas in Bagan, Burma, I really felt like I was on an adventure.
While the topic of Ebola continues to spread around the world, news stories instill shock and fear throughout the United States. It is difficult to leave one’s home without hearing a new story about the fatal disease, and with good reason. At this moment, more than 4,000 cases have been discovered in West Africa alone. And as the fear and mass deaths continue on to more victims, people are taking extreme precautions. Just recently, it was announced that even animals are not safe from this frenzy. According to a recent Washington Post article, one Spanish dog was euthanized after his owner tragically caught the disease.
It shouldn’t be a surprise that the majority of today’s generation is at least a little addicted to technology.
The North Carolina State Fair is a quintessential American experience.
Racism in America isn’t dead — it’s only taken on a different guise, two visiting speakers said at a recent talk at Elon University. Two professors of phycology — Mikkie Hebl from Rice University and Leslie Ashburn-Nardo from Indiana University — challenged an audience of Elon students, faculty and staff in Whitley Auditorium to consider the difference between two different types of racism. Hebl began by drawing a distinction between formal discrimination and what she calls interpersonal discrimination. "Formal [discrimination] is an overt type of discrimination that is illegal,” Hebl said.
While most students may not notice them on a normal day, Elon University has hundreds of security cameras across campus.
Cheating and plagiarism sit at the top of honor code concerns at Elon University and at most schools.
Tre Lennon isn’t difficult to pick out among the Elon University football receivers. Amid a group of shorter guys known for their speed, Lennon sticks out as a tall, lanky option with his 6-foot-3-inch, 174-pound build.
Ask any competitive athlete what the key component is in gaining the competitive edge in sports, and the answer will most likely fall along the lines of strength and staying injury-free. That’s precisely the philosophy that head strength and conditioning coach Ryan Horton is implementing for Elon University athletes. Horton is in the midst of his first season as the head of the strength and conditioning program at Elon.
After working with IMLeagues last year to switch from a paper format to a new online system for students to register for intramurals, Campus Recreation initially saw a slight decrease in the number of participants.
It wasn’t as easy as it may have appeared on paper beforehand, but in a game wrought with momentum shifts and physical play, the Elon University men’s soccer team held off a gritty, yet ultimately overmatched Duke University team 2-1 on Oct.
Bill Gortney stood on the deck of the USS Roosevelt in Mayport, Florida, preparing himself for takeoff. It was spring 1975.
Residents of Alamance County displayed their artistic talents this past weekend in the Alamance studio tours.
The crowd jumped, the beat blared and Ludacris delivered Saturday night for Elon University’s homecoming concert in Colonnades parking lot. The concert, sponsored by Student Union Board and Student Government Association, drew a record 5,700 people from across campus and the surrounding community.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7hbRa_zKn0&feature=youtu.be Devon Gailey, a senior at Elon University, is the Vice President of the cinema producing club, Cinelon.
After 18 months of preparation and fundraising, Elon University has announced plans for the construction of additional buildings for the School of Communications to begin in early 2016.
Many churches are ecstatic about the recent legalization of same-sex marriage in North Carolina - Elon Community Church is one of them. "I am a lesbian," said Elizabeth Rogers, Elon Community Church member and Elon Professor.