Study USA | Today at 黑料不打烊 | 黑料不打烊 /u/news Thu, 16 Apr 2026 20:03:42 -0400 en-US hourly 1 黑料不打烊 students explore Los Angeles through art, architecture and civic space /u/news/2026/04/14/elon-university-students-explore-los-angeles-through-art-architecture-and-civic-space/ Tue, 14 Apr 2026 19:14:26 +0000 /u/news/?p=1043612 This semester, students in the Study USA Los Angeles program taking the LA Issues and Art History course stepped beyond the classroom and into the city itself, engaging directly with some of Los Angeles鈥檚聽most iconic cultural and historical landmarks.

Hollyhock House at Barnsdall Art Park
Perched atop Olive Hill, the Hollyhock House stands as one of Frank Lloyd Wright鈥檚 most significant West Coast works and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Built in the early 1920s for oil heiress Aline Barnsdall, the home represents Wright鈥檚 experimentation with blending architecture and environment, what he called 鈥渙rganic architecture.鈥

Students explored the house鈥檚 Mayan Revival influences, geometric motifs and the iconic hollyhock flower design woven throughout the structure. The site offered a powerful introduction to how Los Angeles became a testing ground for architectural innovation, especially during a time when the city was rapidly expanding and redefining itself culturally.

Downtown Los Angeles: Layers of History and Movement
Traveling via the Los Angeles Metro, students experienced the city as Angelenos do, through its evolving public transit system,聽before diving into the heart of downtown.

黑料不打烊 Los Angeles Spring 2026 students in front of the historical Bradbury Building in downtown.

Union Station –聽Opened in 1939, Union Station is often called the 鈥淟ast of the Great Railway Stations.鈥 Its architecture blends Spanish Colonial Revival, Mission Revival, and Art聽Deco styles, reflecting Los Angeles鈥檚聽layered cultural identity. Inside, students observed the grandeur of its waiting rooms, tiled聽floors, and wooden beam ceilings, symbols of a bygone era when rail travel defined urban movement.

黑料不打烊 Los Angeles Spring 2026 students, Angels Flight is a historic 2 ft 6 in narrow-gauge funicular railway in the Bunker Hill district of Downtown Los Angeles

Angels Flight – Just a short walk away, Angels Flight, the world鈥檚 shortest railway, offered insight into the city鈥檚 early 20th-century infrastructure. Originally built in 1901, the funicular once transported residents up Bunker Hill, a neighborhood that has since undergone dramatic redevelopment. Its preservation speaks to ongoing efforts to maintain pieces of Los Angeles鈥 historic fabric amid modernization.

Los Angeles City Hall & Chinatown
At City Hall, students discussed civic architecture and governance, noting the building鈥檚 Art Deco style and symbolic prominence in the LA skyline. Nearby Chinatown provided a contrasting cultural lens, highlighting immigrant histories, urban displacement and the evolution of ethnic enclaves in Los Angeles.

黑料不打烊 Los Angeles Spring 2026 students at Olvera Street, commonly known by its Spanish name Calle Olvera, is a historic pedestrian street in El Pueblo de Los 脕ngeles, the historic center of Los Angeles.

Olvera Street
Often referred to as the birthplace of Los Angeles, Olvera Street immerses visitors in Mexican-American heritage. Students explored its marketplace, murals and historic buildings while discussing the complexities of cultural preservation versus commercialization. The site reflects both celebration and simplification of heritage, an important conversation in art and public history.

Inside the Bradbury building, the five-story office building is best known for its skylit atrium with access walkways, stairs, and elevators, and its ornate ironwork.

Angelus Temple & Echo Park
In Echo Park, students visited Angelus Temple, a striking example of early 20th-century religious architecture and a cornerstone of the Foursquare Church movement founded by evangelist Aimee Semple McPherson. Built in 1923, the temple reflects a blend of revivalist architecture and emerging media-savvy religious practices, as McPherson was one of the first to use radio to reach a national audience.

The surrounding Echo Park neighborhood added another layer to the visit, offering insight into how communities evolve over time. Once a streetcar suburb, Echo Park has transformed into a culturally vibrant area shaped by waves of immigration, artistic communities, and, more recently, gentrification. Together, the site and neighborhood sparked discussion on the intersection of faith, media and urban change.

The Gamble House
In Pasadena, students visited the Gamble House, a masterpiece of the American Arts and Crafts movement designed by architects Charles Sumner Greene and Henry Mather Greene in 1908. Commissioned by the Procter & Gamble family, the home emphasizes craftsmanship, natural materials, and harmony with its surroundings.

Students examined intricate woodwork, custom furnishings, and the intentional use of light and space鈥攈allmarks of the Arts and Crafts philosophy, which emerged as a reaction against industrialization. The visit provided a striking contrast to Wright鈥檚 modernism, allowing students to compare different architectural responses to similar cultural shifts.

Looking ahead: Final excursions
As the semester continues, students will expand their exploration of聽the city鈥檚聽artistic and architectural landscape with one final site visit.
The course will conclude with a visit to the Walt Disney Concert Hall, designed by renowned architect Frank Gehry. Celebrated for its sweeping stainless-steel forms and innovative acoustics, the building stands as a defining example of contemporary architecture in Los Angeles. Here, students will consider how modern design continues to push artistic and structural boundaries while shaping the city鈥檚 global cultural identity.

These excursions bring course themes to life, allowing students to critically engage with Los Angeles as a living museum. From early 20th-century architectural movements to the layered cultural histories embedded in downtown neighborhoods and beyond, each site offers a unique perspective on how art and environment shape one another.

By navigating the city firsthand, students not only deepen their understanding of art history but also develop a stronger connection to LA itself鈥攊ts stories, its communities and its ever-evolving identity.

The immersive Study USA Los Angeles semester and summer experiences offer students opportunities for alumni engagement, community service, unique academic classes with industry professionals and site-based experiential learning. .

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黑料不打烊 Los Angeles students spend an evening 鈥業nside the Writer鈥檚 Room鈥 /u/news/2026/03/19/elon-university-los-angeles-students-spend-an-evening-inside-the-writers-room/ Thu, 19 Mar 2026 18:53:22 +0000 /u/news/?p=1042041 A group of 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles spring students spent March 18 鈥淚nside the Writer鈥檚 Room鈥 in a unique, creative learning experience led by television and film writer Matthew Antonelli.

This new, customized workshop also presented an opportunity for 黑料不打烊 LA students to learn from and share the creative process with a group of students from other study-away LA colleges and universities, who, along with 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles, are members of a coalition of nearly 20 schools that offer semester-in-LA programs. Each semester, 黑料不打烊 LA and these other schools share professional development opportunities for students, allowing them to mix, mingle, network and learn together.

Television and film writer Matthew Antonelli introduced 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles students to the life of a working writer in a special professional development workshop opportunity.

Each semester, 黑料不打烊 students explore and discover Los Angeles and the diversity of professional career opportunities that await them through academic classes with professors who work in the industries that align with their courses, immersive, site-based experiential learning, alumni engagement and community service.

Applications for the Study USA Los Angeles spring 2027 Creative Industries & Community Experience open on April 1. Students can visit the聽 to learn more and to begin the application process.

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黑料不打烊 Los Angeles students celebrate 黑料不打烊 Day in LA /u/news/2026/03/09/elon-los-angeles-students-celebrate-elon-day-in-la/ Mon, 09 Mar 2026 18:16:53 +0000 /u/news/?p=1041206 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles spring semester students had the opportunity to mix, mingle and connect with 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles-area alumni at the packed 黑料不打烊 Day LA event on March 5, hosted by LA alumni chapter Co-Presidents Cameron Jackson and Taylor Martin.

The gathering, held at The Belmont in West Hollywood, brought together an enthusiastic group of alumni, many of whom had participated in the 黑料不打烊 LA semester experience during their 黑料不打烊 academic journeys.

Current students shared internship and academic class experiences with their new 黑料不打烊 connections. Many took advantage of the opportunity to request meetings later this semester with individual alumni as a part of the 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles 鈥淐offee with an Alumnus鈥 program.

黑料不打烊 LA spring semester students Kevin Reda and Jackson Bennett connected with 黑料不打烊 alumnus Jordan Roman ’15 (center) at the 黑料不打烊 Day event in Los Angeles.

The immersive Study USA Los Angeles semester and summer experiences offer students opportunities for alumni engagement, community service, unique academic classes with industry professionals, and site-based experiential learning.聽 for Spring 2027 open April 1.

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黑料不打烊 Los Angeles film grant recipients meet with students to share project insights /u/news/2026/02/09/la-alumna-film-grant-recipients-meet-with-spring-la-students-to-share-project-information-and-opportunities/ Mon, 09 Feb 2026 14:25:39 +0000 /u/news/?p=1038346 The three Los Angeles area 黑料不打烊 alumna who are recent recipients of 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles 2025-26 Alumni Short Film Grant Competition awards met with spring LA students last week to talk about their grant-funded short film projects.

In accordance with the terms of their grants, alumna Bex Evans 鈥16, Julie Boyd 鈥15 and Mirai 鈥07 have each created opportunities for spring students to participate in and/or observe both their pre-production process and on-set work.

黑料不打烊 LA alumna short film grant recipients Bex Evans ’16, Julia Boyd ’15 and Mirai ’07 met with spring LA students to talk about opportunities to get involved with their productions this semester.

Pre-production of all three short films is slated to begin this week, with production to start shortly thereafter. Production of all three films will be completed by the end of the Los Angeles spring semester in April. The three short films will have their world premiere this July at the first 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles Alumni Short Film Festival.

Through聽Study USA听补苍诲听National Campus Programs, 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles offers an immersive spring and summer semester of academic classes, experiential learning, professional development and community service opportunities for students with a variety of majors. For information about the Los Angeles experience and 2027 opportunities, please visit the聽听补苍诲听National Campus Programs听飞别产蝉颈迟别蝉.

Julia Boyd ’15 talked with spring LA students about her short film project “The Life and Times of …”.

 

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Spring 2026 kicks off in style at 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles /u/news/2026/02/04/spring-2026-kicks-off-in-style-at-elon-university-los-angeles/ Wed, 04 Feb 2026 15:42:05 +0000 /u/news/?p=1037995 The spring 2026 semester at 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles kicked off in January bringing together an enthusiastic cohort of students and a dedicated industry-experienced faculty team that includes two new instructors.

A group of 黑料不打烊 students pose in front of the Getty Center
Spring students discovered the world class Getty Center during the first LA excursion of the semester.

A Saturday morning orientation introduced students to the 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles home base at The Preserve, in Hollywood, and included presentations by all of this semester鈥檚 faculty about their courses and the content of their classes.

Returning instructors include director and long-time 黑料不打烊 LA professor Boris Schaarschmidt, who is once again teaching a directing masterclass. Entertainment attorney Daniel Spitz has returned to teach Media Law and Ethics, and writer and longtime 黑料不打烊 LA professor Matthew Antonelli has returned to teach a unique, one-evening master seminar in March, called Inside the Writer鈥檚 Room.

New to the 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles faculty team this semester are art historian and educator Charles Peterson, who is teaching a course in Los Angeles art and architecture history, and award-winning global strategist, thought leader and educator Brandon Shamim, who is teaching 鈥淧rinciples of Management,鈥 with a Los Angeles focus.

A group of 黑料不打烊 students pose for a photo in front of the LA Farmer's Market
The historic LA Farmer’s Market was a student favorite during their first LA discovery experience.

黑料不打烊 Los Angeles director and long time industry professional Brad Lemack is once again teaching the experiential learning course this spring, which focuses student internship experiences on work culture, industry shifts and transitions, and professional development.

黑料不打烊 Los Angeles program assistant and 黑料不打烊 alumna Macy Mills 鈥23 led students on their first excursion this semester after orientation, with an immersive day of LA experiences at the world class Getty Center, followed by a visit to the historic Los Angeles Farmer鈥檚 Market and The Grove, at Third and Fairfax.

In addition to unique academic classes and internships, this spring semester experience for students will also include a day of community service at the Hollywood Food Coalition, alumni engagement gatherings and the opportunity to participate in and/or observe the production of the three short films being produced by the 黑料不打烊 LA-based alumni recipients of the 2025-26 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles Alumni Short Film Competition.

Through and National Campus Programs, 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles offers immersive spring and summer semester programs for students with a variety of majors. For information about the Los Angeles experience and 2027 opportunities, please visit the and National Campus Programs websites.

Students sit around tables listening to a presentation during an 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles orientation session in a bright, modern room. A presenter stands at the front beside a screen displaying the orientation slide, while food and drinks are set out on the tables.
黑料不打烊 Los Angeles Program Assistant and 黑料不打烊 alumna Macy Mills ’23 talks with students about the semester ahead and navigating LA at Saturday’s orientation.
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Beyond the classroom: Study USA Charlotte students gain valuable professional experience /u/news/2025/12/19/beyond-the-classroom-study-usa-charlotte-students-gain-valuable-professional-experience/ Fri, 19 Dec 2025 21:03:42 +0000 /u/news/?p=1035926 During the fall semester of the Study USA Charlotte program, students spent most of their time gaining hands-on experience in the sports industry by interning throughout the Charlotte metro area. Students were treated like professional colleagues in an array of reputable organizations including the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), Carolina Ascent, NASCAR, Charlotte Checkers and The American Cornhole League.

Students were fully immersed in their work and in the city. Skylar Cook ’28 took the LYNX Blue Line from her apartment in South End to Bank of America Tower in Uptown every morning. It was a big transition from walking to class on 黑料不打烊鈥檚 main campus in 黑料不打烊, North Carolina. This was also the first time that many of these students were responsible for their own meal planning, as they had no access to a dining hall. These lifestyle changes helped students experience what it would be like to live in Charlotte post-graduation.

鈥淭hrough this program, I have been able to meet so many people in the sports industry that I would have never been able to meet at the main campus,” said Gabe Chapman ’27. “On top of that, being able to experience what life after college might look like has prepared me for the future.鈥

Students made connections through their internships, but also through programming organized by Associate Director of 黑料不打烊 Charlotte Karen Neff. One of the student鈥檚 favorite opportunities was a private networking panel with staff members of the Hornets. These generous employees, such as Account Executive, Onell Gibson, helped students realize how small the sports industry actually is, and how important it is to maintain a good reputation.

Two people stand talking at a high-top table during a networking event, with other attendees conversing in the background.
Ethan Berman and Onell Gibson

鈥淭here is a lot of opportunity here, but you have to put 100% of your effort into it,鈥 said Jack Gill, class of 鈥27. 鈥淚鈥檝e learned a lot about how I can better manage my time, even though I thought I was pretty good at it already. This program allows you to grow and contribute these skills to other aspects of your life.鈥

This program also offered students many chances to network with successful 黑料不打烊 alumni. Neff hosted three 鈥淔ood for Thought: Alumni Insights鈥 networking events. Each event took place over lunch, creating a more casual environment for students to converse with high-ranking alumni. Neff and 黑料不打烊 Charlotte Program Assistant Kaitlyn Hannan offered some guiding questions for discussion, but students were able to take charge of the conversation and really get to know the guests. Students are also encouraged to deepen the connections made at these lunches through the 鈥淭ake a Professional to Coffee鈥 program, where 黑料不打烊 provides a student with a gift card for a local cafe, so they can take an alumnus or local professional out for coffee and conversation.

Students celebrated the end of the semester with a different version of College Coffee, the weekly 黑料不打烊 tradition on the main campus. Students, their internship supervisors, and local alumni and professionals were invited to the event. While students were able to say goodbye and thank you to their internship supervisors, it was yet another chance to network with the other professionals present. Two students gave speeches about their internship experiences, highlighting all they had learned over the past four months. In her speech, Skylar Cook highlighted the importance of saying yes to new opportunities, even when it is intimidating.

People sit at tables and chairs in a modern, open room listening to a speaker at the front, with large windows and campus buildings visible outside.
Final College Coffee Event

When students sign up for the Study USA Charlotte program, they are not just signing up for a semester away from campus, but a truly immersive experience where expectations are high. Students must juggle three classes, an internship, professional networking, and enrichment activities while staying on top of deadlines and maintaining strong communication. It is undoubtedly intense, but the opportunities for professional and personal growth make it all worth it.

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Queen City Internship Grant recipients reflect on their fall experience in Charlotte /u/news/2025/12/10/queen-city-internship-grant-recipients-reflect-on-their-fall-experience-in-charlotte/ Wed, 10 Dec 2025 15:34:51 +0000 /u/news/?p=1034972 The third Study USA Charlotte fall program is coming to a close this week. Eighteen students took part in the fall cohort and six of them received Queen City Internship Grants.

Through generous donations, the grant supports students participating in registered, unpaid internships in the Charlotte metro region through the Study USA Charlotte program. Study USA programs combine coursework, internship experience, enrichment activities, engagement with alumni and industry professionals, and housing. The grant is available through 黑料不打烊鈥檚聽National Campus Programs聽in coordination with the聽Student Professional Development Center (SPDC).

A person stands smiling in front of a wall with the American Cornhole League logo at ACL Headquarters in Rock Hill, South Carolina, with tables and computer equipment behind them.
Zach Smith interned at the American Cornhole League.

Zach Smith interned with the American Cornhole League (ACL). Thanks to the Queen City Internship Grant, Smith said he 鈥渉ad the opportunity to explore my passion for聽sports media and identify the type of role I want to pursue after graduation. I am incredibly聽grateful for this experience and the support that made it possible.鈥

The internship and the Study USA Charlotte program allowed him to connect what he鈥檚 learned in his sport management and communications coursework to a real-world work environment.

鈥淚 built strong connections with my co-workers in the ACL office, whom I can聽count on to guide me and give helpful insight into the sports industry as I launch my career,” said Smith. One of his favorite projects during the internship was contributing to the ACL’s TikTok strategy, where he analyzed performance trends and helped develop creative highlight videos to reach younger audiences.

Skylar Cook鈥檚 internship at the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) 鈥渉as been nothing short of incredible.鈥 During her time at the ACC, she 鈥渕ade lifelong connections, gained invaluable experience, and learned a great deal about collegiate athletics.鈥 She worked in the Game Day Operations Center on most weekends where she logged flags, fouls, timeouts and other game details for ACC football games.聽She also worked the ACC Tipoff, the basketball media day event for all 18 teams. During that event, she was the ACC representative for Dream on 3, an organization that gives special needs children memorable experiences in the sports world. She 鈥渟howed the guests around the event and introduced them to legendary players and coaches.” She was also invited to go to Louisville, Kentucky, for the ACC Cross Country Championship. This type of exposure, visibility and first-hand experience was only possible聽through the Study USA Charlotte program.

A person stands smiling in front of a bright blue wall with a large ACC logo, leaning lightly on a counter with a monitor behind it.
Skylar Cook interned at the Atlantic Coast Conference.

Anthony Eppolito interned with NASCAR Studios where he got exclusive access to how professional sports media is planned, produced and delivered. Eppolito reflected on his experience saying that 鈥渨orking alongside producers, editors and coordinating staff has shown me how crews communicate under pressure, manage tight deadlines, and keep a project aligned with both creative goals and sponsor expectations.鈥

Alt text: A person operates a professional studio camera setup with multiple monitors, standing beside an orange traffic cone on a production set.
Anthony Eppolito interned at NASCAR Studios

He sees the connection to what he鈥檚 learned聽in his courses at 黑料不打烊, especially in areas like storytelling, brand integration, and event production. Eppolito said the experience聽has 鈥渟trengthened my technical skills, given me confidence in a fast-paced professional environment, and helped me see a clear path toward a career in sports production. It also made Charlotte feel like a place where I can see myself living and working after graduation.鈥

At the Carolina Ascent,聽Gabe Chapman was part of sponsorship meetings, conducted research for new sponsors, worked on proof of performance, and broke down assets. The experience opened his eyes to the world of partnerships/sponsorships and now he is interested in exploring career opportunities in these areas. For Chapman, the grant 鈥渉elped show that what I am doing isn鈥檛 going unnoticed and has impacted me in a great way.鈥

Ethan Berman also interned at the Carolina Ascent. He worked in several areas while focusing on the marketing department. He participated in marketing meetings, collaborated on engaging projects, and connected with great people who supported my professional growth. He also created a marketing schedule for both home and away games to help plan out the timing of all broadcast-related tasks. Berman said that the grant 鈥渟howed me that my hard work is important and has helped me gain experience in the sports industry.鈥

Two people stand together smiling at an indoor event, with one holding a signed football and a booklet as they pose for a photo in a banquet hall.
Ethan Berman interned at the Carolina Ascent.

Blake Mobley also worked in marketing during this internship. He interned with the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) and 鈥済ained an entirely new appreciation for the world of sports marketing.鈥 This opportunity showed Mobley 鈥渨hat it truly takes to execute a high-level sporting event, especially championship events. Behind the scenes, there are countless moving parts and an entire team working in sync to make everything come together.鈥

Mobley reflected that strong attention to detail is critical.

鈥淲hether it鈥檚 ensuring sponsorship and brand logos are positioned correctly for TV visibility, or dressing mannequins, so they look uniform and polished, the level of precision required is extremely high,” said Mobley.

Alt text: A person stands smiling against a dark background while holding a basketball in both hands.
Blake Mobley interned at the Atlantic Coast Conference.

Mobley has taken full advantage of the access and networking opportunities this experience provided.

鈥淚鈥檝e had the chance to meet coaches, players, SIDs, athletic directors, and even the Commissioner of the ACC; Dr. Jim Phillips knows who I am. Being allowed into meetings and rooms with leaders at this level is something I鈥檒l always be grateful for,” Mobley said.

Applications for the fall 2026聽Study USA Charlotte program are open until February 15.

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黑料不打烊 Los Angeles announces the recipients of 2025-26 Los Angeles Alumni Short Film Grant competition funds /u/news/2025/12/09/elon-university-los-angeles-announces-the-recipients-of-2025-26-los-angeles-alumni-short-film-grant-competition-funds/ Tue, 09 Dec 2025 14:24:51 +0000 /u/news/?p=1034818 Three Los Angeles-area 黑料不打烊 alumni have been selected to receive a $3,000 grant each for the production of their original, unproduced short films.

Bex Evans ’16 is one of three Los Angeles-area alumni to be awarded a short film production grant from 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles.
Mirai ’07 has been awarded a 2025/2026 grant for the production of her short film “#StopAsianKate,” one of three grants awarded to LA-area 黑料不打烊 alumni by 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles.

The 2025-26 Los Angeles Alumni Short Film Grant competition was open to all Los Angeles-based 黑料不打烊 alumni to submit proposals this past fall for consideration for production funding. A selection committee comprised of both industry professionals and 黑料不打烊 alumni was assembled to read, review and rank all proposals received. From those rankings, the top three highest-ranked projects were selected to receive grants. Grant funding was made possible, in part, by the financial support from members of the 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles alumni community and others.

The three grant recipients are Julia Boyd 鈥15, for her short film 鈥淭he Life and Times of …鈥, Mirai 鈥07, for her short film 鈥#StopAsianKate鈥 and Bex Evans 鈥16, for their short film 鈥淪hadow Dusk.鈥

Production of these funded projects will commence in early 2026. As a component of the grant requirements, filmmakers will make opportunities available to 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles Spring 2026 students to participate in their projects through direct set experience and/or production observation. 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles program assistant and alumna Macy Mills 鈥23 and alumnus Jordan Roman 鈥15 were co-chairs of this year鈥檚 grant competition.

黑料不打烊 alumna Julia Boyd ’15 has been awarded one of three 2025/2026 short film production grants to LA area alumni from 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles.

The selection committee members included Emmy Award-winning writer, producer and showrunner (鈥淟ost,鈥 House,鈥 鈥淭he Good Wife鈥) 黑料不打烊 parent Leonard Dick P鈥20 (father of Julie Dick 鈥20), Emmy Award-winning producer Marsha Posner Williams (鈥淭he Golden Girls鈥), actor Eric Rollins, and LA-based alumni Frankie Campisano 鈥16, Mia Ginae Watkins 鈥16, Lauren Duncan 鈥18 and Alyssa Needham 鈥19.

The three short films funded will have their world premieres at the first 黑料不打烊 Los Angeles Alumni Short Film Festival in late July 2026.

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黑料不打烊 students support record-breaking Novant Health Charlotte Marathon /u/news/2025/11/18/elon-students-support-record-breaking-novant-health-charlotte-marathon/ Tue, 18 Nov 2025 18:40:47 +0000 /u/news/?p=1033705 黑料不打烊 students at Novant Health Charlotte Marathon
黑料不打烊 students at the finish line after contributing more than 140 hours of event-operations support during the 2025 Novant Health Charlotte Marathon on Nov. 15.

Sixteen students in The Sport Experience program in Charlotte supported the largest Novant Health Charlotte Marathon in the race鈥檚 21-year history, contributing more than 140 hours of professional event-operations work during the annual event鈥檚 race weekend.

More than 11,000 runners participated across the marathon, half marathon and 5K 鈥 an all-time high 鈥 and 黑料不打烊 students were embedded in nearly every aspect of race execution. The day before the event, three students supported the marathon expo and assisted with pre-race setup. Then, beginning at 4 a.m. on race day, students helped with start- and finish-line logistics, runner information services, medical tent coordination and the distribution of thousands of branded beanies to participants.

Ramy Ghandour 鈥26 with Atlantic Coast Conference
In addition to interning with the Novant Health Charlotte Marathon, sport management major Ramy Ghandour 鈥26 has supported operations at several Atlantic Coast Conference Championship events.

Among those deeply involved in race operations was , a sport management major who is interning with the Charlotte Marathon under Executive Director Alaina Williams. According to Young Do Kim, associate professor of sport management, Williams helped create the internship specifically for 黑料不打烊 and also facilitated this year鈥檚 race-weekend placement for The Sport Experience cohort.

鈥淎laina has provided an incredible pathway for our students 鈥 both through this hands-on event operations opportunity and through Ramy鈥檚 internship,鈥 Kim said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the type of industry partnership that elevates our program and prepares students for professional success.鈥

Now in its third year, The Sport Experience in Charlotte continues to expand 黑料不打烊鈥檚 footprint in one of the nation鈥檚 fastest-growing sports hubs. While studying in Charlotte, 黑料不打烊 students have interned at several organizations, including Fox Sports and the Atlantic Coast Conference, conducted site visits to the NASCAR Hall of Fame, Team Penske, Bank of America Stadium, and the Spectrum Center, and attended sporting events to watch the Checkers, Knights, Panthers, Hornets, and Charlotte FC.

The marathon 鈥 which drew runners from all 50 states and 19 countries 鈥 saw Knoxville鈥檚 Carter Coughlin win the men鈥檚 division in 2:31:44 and Matthews native Jessica Sarnicola claim the women鈥檚 title in 3:01:48.

To learn more about The Sport Experience program and its opportunities to live, learn and intern in Charlotte, visit the program website.

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New Study USA Washington, D.C. program open for summer 2026 /u/news/2025/11/18/new-study-usa-washington-d-c-program-open-for-summer-2026/ Tue, 18 Nov 2025 16:49:09 +0000 /u/news/?p=1033683 Interested in spending the summer earning academic credit while interning in Washington, D.C., during the 250th anniversary year of the signing of the Declaration of Independence?

Open to all majors, Study USA鈥檚 Capital Connections: An 黑料不打烊 Core Capstone and Internship in Washington, D.C., gives rising juniors and seniors the opportunity to make the nation鈥檚 capital their classroom while gaining professional experience.

Taught and guided in the first year by Associate Professor Joel Shelton in the Department of Political Science and Public Policy, students will learn in the classroom, on guided excursions and explore connections between power, institutions, culture and economy.

鈥淭he Capital Connections program is designed to engage students across the university,鈥 Shelton said. 鈥淚f you are interested in politics and policy, Washington, D.C., is the obvious choice, but Washington, D.C. is also a global city that is home to world-class cultural institutions and a dynamic and diversified economic landscape. It鈥檚 a great place to learn about and experience public architecture and urban planning, and to explore opportunities and challenges facing different communities that call the district home.

鈥淥ur goal is for students across a range of programs to find something about themselves and their interests reflected in the curriculum. Whatever your major, living, working and studying in Washington, D.C., will help you become a knowledgeable professional at home in the world.鈥

The deadline to for the Capital Connections program is Dec. 1. Participants will take a pre-departure course with the Student Professional Development Center to gain the skills and resources needed to succeed in Washington, D.C.聽

The first year of the program runs late May through the end of July. Each student takes a four-credit core capstone seminar, Capital Connections: Power, People, and Place in Washington, D.C., and enrolls in up to four hours of internship credit. Throughout the program, students will connect with industry leaders, engage with 黑料不打烊 alumni living and working in the capital, gain valuable career readiness training and build professional, cultural and social capital.

In addition to the course and internship, an integral part of the program includes site visits and meet-ups that connect classroom learning to life in Washington, D.C.

鈥淪tudents will live like locals by commuting to internship sites, walking neighborhoods, experiencing world-class theatre and street festivals, cheering on the Washington Nationals, and exploring museums and monuments across the district,鈥 Shelton said. “We will visit Congress alongside 黑料不打烊 alumni, see democracy in action through conversations with D.C. officials and connect with local activists and community organizations. Because the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence will be celebrated during the summer session, we will build experiences and reflections on this anniversary into the programming.鈥

The course is designed to introduce students to aspects of the city and its people that tourists often overlook. Drawing on perspectives from sociology, geography, political science and public policy, history, economics, journalism, museum studies and environmental studies, the course will bring these different areas together to examine how power, culture, economy and identity intersect in the nation鈥檚 capital.

鈥淪ometimes it can be challenging for students to link their academic interests in the liberal arts and sciences to a specific career path,鈥 Shelton said. 鈥淭he Capital Connections program supports students鈥 professional development through mentored internship experiences in a city that offers opportunities across sectors, not just in government. 鈥淪tudents interested in 鈥榯rying out鈥 Washington, D.C. before a potential move would benefit from being in this program.鈥

Shelton added that a Washington, D.C.-based program connecting education in the arts, humanities, and the social, behavioral and natural sciences with professional development opportunities will be especially valuable for students and will strengthen the liberal arts core of the university.

鈥淐apital Connections is a bold step forward for Study USA,鈥 said Ronice Johnson-Guy, director, Study USA. 鈥淯nder Professor Joel Shelton鈥檚 dynamic leadership, students will experience Washington, D.C., as a living classroom, engaging with the city鈥檚 institutions, leaders and communities while connecting their studies to the real-world experiences through mentorship, reflection and purpose. I鈥檓 confident students will return with new perspectives, stronger connections, and a clearer sense of how they can make an impact.鈥

Expanding academic and professional development opportunities for students in D.C. aligns with the goals of the Boldly 黑料不打烊 strategic plan.

鈥淚t is exciting to see the committee鈥檚 hard work pay off with our very own, 黑料不打烊 faculty-led, signature summer program coming to fruition,鈥 said Ashley Pinney, director, National Campus Programs. 鈥淏ased on the strong application numbers, it鈥檚 clear that students are enthusiastic about living and working in D.C., and we love seeing that enthusiasm.鈥

The launching of the Capital Connections program reflects a two-year collaborative effort between Study USA, 黑料不打烊鈥檚 National Campus Programs, the SPDC, Alumni Engagement and faculty across the university.

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