Posted on December 19, 2025

Jordan Marelli next to a poster showing his Smash ranking out UNCG Esports Arena.

Jordan Marelli always leaned toward the competitive aspect of videogaming. “I’d open the game and only fight the bosses,” he says. I was never interested in progressing the story.”

But he never expected that penchant would catapult him as far as he’s gone now — not just the top Super Smash Bros. Ultimate brawler in North Carolina, but one of the Top 150 players in world. He hit that milestone as part of the UNC Greensboro Esports Smash team.

“I was eating dinner with friends, watching the rankings video,” says Marelli. “They start with the Top 50. I knew I was on the fringe, so I wasn’t 100% sure I’d make it.”

Ironically, he figured it out thanks to a loss. When the video announced a player who bested him in one tough round, it noted Marelli’s name among that gamer’s notable wins. He says, “I was like, ‘Wait a minute! If I’m on their notable wins, that’s got to mean I made it.’ And lo and behold, I open the list. I started at 100 and found my name at 140. I was pretty happy about it.”

An Underdog Story

Marelli’s love of video gaming began on the Nintendo DS. He started with his friend’s Batman games, but he was always drawn to the fights. His character choice in Smash is Hero from the popular series Dragon Quest. There are professional Smash players ranked below Marelli who base their whole careers around the game.

His personal success is one more notch in an incredible Year Zero for UNCG’s collegiate esports players. The Smash team won the Grand Finals in the NECC and Playfly, beating more than 300 colleges combined.

UNCG Smash player Jordan Marelli points to his trophies.

When Marelli talks about how it went down in the NECC, it sounds like a classic sports underdog movie. As they took down one higher-ranked team after another, the Spartans realized they had a fighting chance to win it all. “A lot was on my shoulders,” he says. “But my team backed me up. I thought, ‘Okay, maybe we can win this.’ Then game two, we got blown out. It was pretty bad.”

With gritted teeth, they went into game three. “My best buddy Rafael was fighting a Top 10 player in the world,” says Marelli. “He beat him 3-0, and we won the game.”

Smash is a 1v1 game. Nevertheless, Marelli says he feels the team effort each round. “I feel I should put in my full effort for the sake of the school,” he says. “I mean, I’m representing them; I need to try to be the best player I can be.”

Going Hard in the Paint

Marelli’s athletic experience goes beyond the keyboard and controller. He interns as a production assistant for the Greensboro Swarm. The professional basketball team has a partnership with esports, with season-long promotional spots, seatbacks, and a UNCG Night at the Swarm, which brings in hundreds of teachers and students from the community for a STEM gaming night.

“I love basketball,” he says. “I love being there, watching basketball for free, but also getting to be a part of the experience for the fans, making the experience as engaging as I can for them.”

That internship and his world ranking are just a taste of a potential future in athletics, which Marelli is unpacking now in the Bryan School of Business and Economics. He first considered UNCG for its proximity to his home in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. He was pleasantly surprised to learn that the marketing, entrepreneurship, hospitality and tourism department had a new concentration in esports management.

UNCG Smash player Jordan Marelli at the computer.

“Honestly, I was a very big doubter of esports for a very long time,” he admits. “I didn’t see it becoming very big at all. I just played Smash for fun.”

The minor is one of several esports-related programs spread across UNCG preparing students to take part in this growing industry.

“The gaming and esports industries have seen tremendous growth over the last decade” says John Borchert, Ph.D., director of Applied Research in Computer Arts, Digitization, and Esports. “Not only did it generate approximately $184 billion in 2023—surpassing film ($34billion) and music ($26 billion) combined—the skills and technologies that our students learn around gaming, simulation, and real-time 3D translate easily into other sectors like health care, energy, and defense. Our interdisciplinary approach opens a world of possibilities for students invested in gaming and esports.”

New Skills Unlocked

“It’s a great opportunity for students who are contemplating going into the esports field,” says Tom Renedo, Jr., a lecturer who coordinates the Bryan School’s program. Before coming to UNCG, he worked for video game conglomerate Electronic Arts (EA SPORTS).

Renedo emphasizes that, while players make up the face of esports, “only a very small part of the population goes on to the professional level.”

Hero from Dragon Quest on the computer screen in front of UNCG student Jordan Marelli.

Like any sport, there’s an enormous team working around each athlete, which makes the skills learned through the esports concentration transferable to the rest of the sports world. Gaming facilities need operations staff to run the tournaments, and hospitality management to support travelers. Players rely on marketing and public relations specialists. And just like other athletes, esports players benefit from fitness experts to keep them healthy.

“They learn about organizing the event, learning how to market it, soliciting sponsorships, and managing partnerships. And obviously, we all know how big social media is,” says Renedo.

UNCG backs this academic focus with strong infrastructure. “We probably have one of the best on-campus arenas I’ve seen,” said Renedo. “Recreation and Wellness does an unbelievable job of supporting the program.”

The opportunity means a lot for a player like Marelli who is always driven to get better. Ironically, he thought he was getting tired of Smash before he got to UNCG. When he discovered its esports community, he got all fired up again.

Whether playing for fun, studying for a grade, or working for a team, he’s in it to win it. And the skills he honed to become a Top 150 player can be applied to much more in his life.

“It just goes to show that the more effort you put in, the better results you get,” he says.

Story by Janet Imrick, University Communications
Photography by Sean Norona, University Communications

Lead the way in the gaming industry

Latest News

June 16, 2026

Game-Changing New, Online Master’s in Sport Management and Recreation Therapy  

Sport management is a growing industry, and UNC Greensboro is preparing the next generation of leaders to meet the demand. The new...

June 11, 2026

Countdown to 250: Alumna Shares What Makes NC Special

Anna Freeman Moore ’23 MA, a curator at the State Capitol, spends her days telling the stories of North Carolina in ways that appe...

June 10, 2026

The 2026 National Principal of the Year is a Spartan

Before becoming the 2026 National Principal of the Year, Spartan Jason Johnson was a high school kid in Durham watching the way his ...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on January 23, 2026

Research Writing

Twenty-seven Spartans—most from the School of Health and Human Sciences—challenged themselves to write a paper worthy of a top journal in just days instead of the traditional months. With the help of experts from ReVel Collab, they spent their winter break learning new ways to analyze research and increase their chances of getting published.

Latest News

June 16, 2026

Game-Changing New, Online Master’s in Sport Management and Recreation Therapy  

Sport management is a growing industry, and UNC Greensboro is preparing the next generation of leaders to meet the demand. The new...

June 11, 2026

Countdown to 250: Alumna Shares What Makes NC Special

Anna Freeman Moore ’23 MA, a curator at the State Capitol, spends her days telling the stories of North Carolina in ways that appe...

June 10, 2026

The 2026 National Principal of the Year is a Spartan

Before becoming the 2026 National Principal of the Year, Spartan Jason Johnson was a high school kid in Durham watching the way his ...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on December 11, 2025

Four people talk and work in a conference room. One is wearing a VR headset, and a monitor nearby displays what he can see.

UNC Greensboro (UNCG) has been selected as one of only three U.S. universities to receive a 2025 university grant from Virtualware and HTC VIVE. With the funding, UNCG, UCLA, and the Illinois Institute of Technology will establish cutting-edge extended reality (XR) centers to drive innovative research, collaboration, and workforce development in their regions.

Through the center, UNCG students, faculty, and industry and government partners will lead extended reality innovation and develop the workforce of the future.

“Extended reality is accelerating discovery in every field, from health to engineering to the arts,” said UNCG Vice Chancellor for Research and Engagement Sherine O. Obare. Using virtual reality, augmented reality, and mixed reality, people can visualize data, practice difficult skills safely, or explore new scenarios firsthand. “XR is quickly becoming a core tool across industries, and this investment positions our University and our region to benefit from its enormous potential.”

Region-wide development

As part of the funding agreement, UNCG’s new Spartan Immersive Systems Collaboratory (SISC) will adopt a shared-access model, offering regional industry and government organizations free use of the facility’s immersive infrastructure to spur joint research and innovation.

“Immersive technology and artificial intelligence are transforming how we learn, work, and build,” said UNCG Bryan School of Business and Economics Assistant Professor Motahareh Pourbehzadi, the project’s lead principal investigator. “With our new Collaboratory, we are elevating the virtual reality experience from an individual activity to a collaborative, group-based learning environment.” SISC will serve as a gateway for students, faculty, and industry and government partners to explore and develop new immersive technologies. “It will also allow the University to train the workforce of the future right here in Greensboro.”

SISC will launch in 2026, furnished with HTC VIVE headsets, powered by the VIROO cloud platform, and offering professional services to support applied research, digital engineering, workforce development, and industry partnerships. Dr. Pourbehzadi, along with co-principal investigators Dr. Lakshmi Iyer and Dr. Moez Farokhnia Hamedani, will supervise the center development.

CDW and Lenovo are also contributors to the initiative. “CDW provided us with space and support for virtual reality development during the summer,” said Iyer. “They have been big advocates, bringing Lenovo in to support us with servers and the PC configurations needed for the Collaboratory. These partnerships are helping position UNCG as a regional leader in immersive technology innovation.”

Building on existing strengths

Students will hold leadership positions in center development. “Students are an essential part of this endeavor,” said Farokhnia Hamedani, “Doctoral student Nicholas Amoah, for example, initially developed our virtual reality capacity as part of our new Google-funded Spartan Cyber Guardian Academy.”

As UNCG expands its research footprint, SISC will enhance the University’s capacity to drive technological convergence and further its mission as a rising research institution.

“We are honored to be selected by Virtualware and HTC VIVE for this forward-looking initiative,” said Obare. “This award reflects UNCG’s growing momentum in applied research, digital engineering, and regional economic partnerships.”


Photography by Sean Norona

Latest News

June 16, 2026

Game-Changing New, Online Master’s in Sport Management and Recreation Therapy  

Sport management is a growing industry, and UNC Greensboro is preparing the next generation of leaders to meet the demand. The new...

June 11, 2026

Countdown to 250: Alumna Shares What Makes NC Special

Anna Freeman Moore ’23 MA, a curator at the State Capitol, spends her days telling the stories of North Carolina in ways that appe...

June 10, 2026

The 2026 National Principal of the Year is a Spartan

Before becoming the 2026 National Principal of the Year, Spartan Jason Johnson was a high school kid in Durham watching the way his ...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on January 09, 2026

UNCG students look over one another's shoulders at a laptop screen.

Virtual presentations are becoming more common in education and the workforce. Graduate students can compete to keep audiences engaged in “Webinars Worth Watching,” the Graduate School’s collaboration with University Libraries from Feb. 16-20.

Latest News

June 16, 2026

Game-Changing New, Online Master’s in Sport Management and Recreation Therapy  

Sport management is a growing industry, and UNC Greensboro is preparing the next generation of leaders to meet the demand. The new...

June 11, 2026

Countdown to 250: Alumna Shares What Makes NC Special

Anna Freeman Moore ’23 MA, a curator at the State Capitol, spends her days telling the stories of North Carolina in ways that appe...

June 10, 2026

The 2026 National Principal of the Year is a Spartan

Before becoming the 2026 National Principal of the Year, Spartan Jason Johnson was a high school kid in Durham watching the way his ...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on January 06, 2026

ASL interpreter for NC Emergency Management

IDEAS alumnus and freelance ASL interpreter on his time with UNCG 

Alumnus Mark Lineberger grew up fluent in English and American Sign Language (ASL). His mother, who had deaf siblings, taught at the North Carolina School for the Deaf in his hometown of Morganton, where his father served as a minister for a deaf congregation. ASL was the family’s second language. 

Knowing he wanted a career working with the deaf and hard of hearing, Lineberger enrolled in UNC Greensboro School of Education which offered the only undergraduate deaf education program in North Carolina. During his time at UNCG in the late 1990s, he would help create the program’s concentrations in interpreting and advocacy services and help lay the groundwork for the Interpreting, Deaf Education and Advocacy Services (IDEAS) program the School of Education offers today. 

Deaf education beyond the classroom 

Committed to using his ASL skills, Lineberger chose to major in deaf education, but unlike his classmates, he did not plan to teach. While on campus, he interpreted for other students in their classes and expanded his experience working with people with hearing disabilities.. 

He earned a certificate to interpret in the community but was not sure how he would put it to use. “I had a base of fluency,” he says. “But I had to learn how to adapt it to different situations.”  

In the late 1970s, the early years of the deaf education program, most of the world’s deaf individuals were taught to speak and read lips. Research later showed that oral language is not the only effective way to communicate, which uncovered a need for those who can interpret.  

“If you wanted an interpreter at your doctor’s appointment or other things, you asked a family member or friend,” recalls Lineberger. He wanted to see that change. 

So did UNCG faculty members Edgar Schroyer, Glenda Torres, and Mary V. Compton, who were considering creating a concentration in Deaf Advocacy for people like Lineberger, who wanted to work in various contexts besides teaching.  

Today, Lineberger says lightheartedly that he was the “guinea pig” as faculty designed a curriculum that included general education courses that led to more advanced coursework in psychology, sociology, social work, and other subjects to prepare interpreters for various settings. 

They knew that being a successful and versatile interpreter requires more than just knowing ASL.  

“Their guidance of my academic path laid the groundwork for the IDEAS program,” Lineberger says. “You need content knowledge to work in a legal setting, social services setting, religious settings and others. You have to know a little about a lot, so you can interpret not just words, but concepts for an equivalent message in ASL.”  

A Quest for Understanding 

Now, 25 years after graduation, Lineberger is a busy freelance interpreter. He works wherever he is called to go: courtrooms, doctors’ offices, press conferences and anywhere interpreting is needed. The Americans with Disabilities Act, passed in 1990, requires that an interpreter be provided upon request in a variety of situations.  

Lineberger gets some of his work through interpreting agencies, while some clients call him directly. He is in great demand. He might go from a courtroom to a physical therapist’s office to a public official’s press conference, all within a day.  

“I enjoy the variety of the work I get to do,” he says. 

When he does his best work, people hardly notice he’s in the room. They just know they can communicate.

It’s critical to recognize, he says, that in each situation interpreters are not “helping deaf people.” Rather, they provide communication, language equity, and equal access to the world through interpretation.  

His goal at each job is to ensure that both deaf people and hearing people leave the appointment or event with the same knowledge of what was said. Both need interpretation to communicate. In facilitating that process, Lineberger is also breaking barriers and building community. 

“It’s a big responsibility and should be treated as such,” Lineberger says.   

UNCG’s Interpreting, Deaf Education and Advocacy Services (IDEAS) Program in the School of Education is celebrating its 50th year. Begun in 1975, offering only a bachelor’s degree in Deaf Education, it now also includes concentrations in Interpreting and Advocacy Services.  

Story by Mary Daily

Photography by NCDHHS Division of Services for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing

Juliette Vayer

Make the world more accessible

Latest News

June 16, 2026

Game-Changing New, Online Master’s in Sport Management and Recreation Therapy  

Sport management is a growing industry, and UNC Greensboro is preparing the next generation of leaders to meet the demand. The new...

June 11, 2026

Countdown to 250: Alumna Shares What Makes NC Special

Anna Freeman Moore ’23 MA, a curator at the State Capitol, spends her days telling the stories of North Carolina in ways that appe...

June 10, 2026

The 2026 National Principal of the Year is a Spartan

Before becoming the 2026 National Principal of the Year, Spartan Jason Johnson was a high school kid in Durham watching the way his ...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on January 05, 2026

UNCG alumna Ruhani Amin leans against the stairway bannister.

Ruhani Amin ’25 M.S. faced a difficult choice that ended her plans for medical school, but she never let her dreams of higher education come to an end. In UNCG’s Bryan School of Business and Economics, she seized her chance for a fresh start.

Latest News

June 16, 2026

Game-Changing New, Online Master’s in Sport Management and Recreation Therapy  

Sport management is a growing industry, and UNC Greensboro is preparing the next generation of leaders to meet the demand. The new...

June 11, 2026

Countdown to 250: Alumna Shares What Makes NC Special

Anna Freeman Moore ’23 MA, a curator at the State Capitol, spends her days telling the stories of North Carolina in ways that appe...

June 10, 2026

The 2026 National Principal of the Year is a Spartan

Before becoming the 2026 National Principal of the Year, Spartan Jason Johnson was a high school kid in Durham watching the way his ...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on December 23, 2025

Dr. Amanda Giordano

Now an associate professor at the University of Georgia, Amanda Giordano 09, 12 Ph.D., reflects on her time at UNCG cultivating the clinical, research, and supervision skills that define her career. She encourages Spartans to cherish every moment and maximize their experience by building meaningful connections.

Latest News

June 16, 2026

Game-Changing New, Online Master’s in Sport Management and Recreation Therapy  

Sport management is a growing industry, and UNC Greensboro is preparing the next generation of leaders to meet the demand. The new...

June 11, 2026

Countdown to 250: Alumna Shares What Makes NC Special

Anna Freeman Moore ’23 MA, a curator at the State Capitol, spends her days telling the stories of North Carolina in ways that appe...

June 10, 2026

The 2026 National Principal of the Year is a Spartan

Before becoming the 2026 National Principal of the Year, Spartan Jason Johnson was a high school kid in Durham watching the way his ...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on December 12, 2025

Doctoral grad poses with his family and mentor on a clear day outside of the UNCG Auditorium.

Traditions and family gatherings permeate our culture as the holiday season brings each year to a close, but for 1,954 UNC Greensboro Class of 2025 graduates, families gathered early to celebrate life-changing accomplishments.

At UNCG, Commencement is truly a family affair. Proud parents watch their children reach a goal they’ve been dreaming of since they were born. Children beam with excitement as they witness a parent or family member walk across the stage to get their diploma. Friends who have become chosen family line up in gowns with vibrant stoles and decorated caps to take the last steps of their college journeys. And faculty and staff mentors toast the fruits of their labor as they send a new group of Spartan alumni out into the world to make it better.

Graduate stands in a sea of seated grads to wave over all of the caps.

Shouldering the Responsibility of Knowledge

On Thursday, UNCG’s highest level of mentors, the doctoral advisors, hooded a new group of Spartan academic doctors in a personal ceremony at the UNCG Auditorium. The smiles and hugs between the advisors and Ph.D. candidates held a culmination of questions, research, and breakthroughs. In the gallery, family members of all ages absorbed the magnitude of their loved ones’ achievements.

On a stage in the UNCG Auditorium, a woman is bestowed with Honorary Letters while other faculty members look on.
Elvira Green receives honorary Doctor of Letters degree.

Doctoral letters of science, education, and the arts were bestowed, as well as an honorary Doctor of Letters degree to mezzo-soprano Elvira Green. Her talents have taken her to New York City’s Metropolitan Opera, performances in every continent, the University of the Virgin Islands in St. Thomas to design a vocal studies program, and now back to her native state of North Carolina. Her career highlights brought to mind all the places that UNCG’s doctoral candidates will take their knowledge.

Speaker Joshua Goodman ’05 ’08 Ph.D. spoke of his own hooding as “deeply meaningful,” and remembered the weight of it on his shoulders representing “years of mentorship, challenge, and growth.” He welcomed the candidates into the familial ranks of UNCG alumni as “stewards of the values and vision of the institution.”

“You are ambassadors of UNCG’s commitment to equity, innovation, discovery and transformative learning. Go forward boldly, carrying with you the knowledge and passion needed to make a better future.”

– Joshua Goodman ’05 ’08 Ph.D.

Faculty member in cap and gown speaks at a commencement ceremony in the UNCG Auditorium.

Bold Steps to a Bright Future

At the larger ceremony in the First Horizon Coliseum on Friday, families and supporters were even more vocal in their support of the undergraduate and master’s candidates. Presenting flowers, boldly wearing blue and gold, and waving excitedly, friends and relatives scanned the rows of chairs on the floor looking for their loved ones seated in caps and gowns.

This year’s student speaker, Juan Lopez Delapaz ’24 ’25 M.S. represented the 1,488 undergraduates and 321 master’s candidates receiving diplomas. He also spoke for the many first-generation and Hispanic students in attendance when he began his remarks with a message of gratefulness to his parents. The audience responded with fervent applause to his Spanish declaration.

Student speaker at the podium at UNCG commencement with grad caps lined in the foreground and a crowd in the stands behind him.
“Mami y Papi, si se pudo.”

– Juan Lopez Delapaz ’24 ’25 M.S

A product of the Bryan School’s master’s program in information technology and management, Delapaz pledged that his “growth would never stop” as he continues his career as a proud UNCG double alumnus.

This mindset promises to bring a dedicated group of future teammates to N.C. employers, according to remarks from Chancellor Franklin D. Gilliam, Jr. He reminded the graduates that employers love UNCG alumni because they are ready to work.

“We are contributing to the prosperity of this state,” he said. “I hope you intend to leave footsteps in your communities and families for others to follow. Become that ladder of prosperity!”

Spartan Family Strong

The emotions present throughout Commencement activities remind our community of the importance of family support and the diligence of the students who join the ranks of Spartan alumni when they cross the stage to receive their diplomas. It’s why UNCG faculty and staff are committed to the University, and why N.C. employers and communities thrive with Spartan alumni at their helms.

“My parents came to this country with hopes of giving my siblings and me better opportunities,” Lopez Delapaz said, “And today, this moment, is a testament to their sacrifice.”

Congratulations to the Class of 2025, as they go forth to make the world a better place and bring their families prosperity in the process.

Story by Becky Deakins, University Communications.
Photos by Sean Norona, University Communications.
Videography by David Row, University Communications.

Wide shot of commencement stage with a sea of caps in the foreground.

Take Your First Step Towards Graduation.

Latest News

June 16, 2026

Game-Changing New, Online Master’s in Sport Management and Recreation Therapy  

Sport management is a growing industry, and UNC Greensboro is preparing the next generation of leaders to meet the demand. The new...

June 11, 2026

Countdown to 250: Alumna Shares What Makes NC Special

Anna Freeman Moore ’23 MA, a curator at the State Capitol, spends her days telling the stories of North Carolina in ways that appe...

June 10, 2026

The 2026 National Principal of the Year is a Spartan

Before becoming the 2026 National Principal of the Year, Spartan Jason Johnson was a high school kid in Durham watching the way his ...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on December 22, 2025

Virginia Madorin

Virginia Madorin 11, a UNCG alumna in deaf education, now serves as an Individuals with Disabilities Education Act consultant for the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction. In her role, she alleviates communication barriers for deaf students and improves statewide access to education.

Latest News

June 16, 2026

Game-Changing New, Online Master’s in Sport Management and Recreation Therapy  

Sport management is a growing industry, and UNC Greensboro is preparing the next generation of leaders to meet the demand. The new...

June 11, 2026

Countdown to 250: Alumna Shares What Makes NC Special

Anna Freeman Moore ’23 MA, a curator at the State Capitol, spends her days telling the stories of North Carolina in ways that appe...

June 10, 2026

The 2026 National Principal of the Year is a Spartan

Before becoming the 2026 National Principal of the Year, Spartan Jason Johnson was a high school kid in Durham watching the way his ...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on December 16, 2025

Katie Lambert

Katie Lambert is just one example of how an education in the arts can translate into real-world success. After starting in UNCG’s School of Theatre, she built a career through internships and hard work, and now serves as manager of digital marketing and design at Warner Bros.

Latest News

June 16, 2026

Game-Changing New, Online Master’s in Sport Management and Recreation Therapy  

Sport management is a growing industry, and UNC Greensboro is preparing the next generation of leaders to meet the demand. The new...

June 11, 2026

Countdown to 250: Alumna Shares What Makes NC Special

Anna Freeman Moore ’23 MA, a curator at the State Capitol, spends her days telling the stories of North Carolina in ways that appe...

June 10, 2026

The 2026 National Principal of the Year is a Spartan

Before becoming the 2026 National Principal of the Year, Spartan Jason Johnson was a high school kid in Durham watching the way his ...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media