News

Asbury to Dedicate New Building in March
Asbury University students, faculty/staff and administration will be joined on campus by alumni and other friends of the University on March 4, for dedication ceremonies for the opening of the Andrew S. Miller Center for Communication Arts. The building is designed with the convergence of media in mind, so different disciplines can work together collaboratively. It's also designed for flexibility, where spaces have multiple purposes; like classrooms with small openings in the walls for a camera to shoot footage, and both interior and exterior back lots that will be used for TV and film sets.
Comm Arts Students Shoot Film in 3-D
With the opening of Asbury University’s new Andrew S. Miller Center for Communication Arts this year, there are plenty of “firsts” happening within the various departments on campus that will utilize the one-of-a-kind facility. But these firsts aren’t all happening within the walls of the building. This winter, for instance, Asbury students had the unique opportunity of creating a short film utilizing a state-of-the-art 3-D camera. A credit to the University’s reputation for Communication Arts excellence, Panasonic loaned Asbury its newest professional 3-D video camera for two weeks last semester.
Comm. Andrew S. Miller, Friend to AU, Passes Away
Former Salvation Army Commissioner Andrew S. Miller — who attended Asbury University in the early 1940s and was a long-time member of the institution’s board of trustees — was promoted to glory Wednesday morning surrounded by family and friends in Lawrenceville, Ga.
Center for Communication Arts taking shape
In just four months, communication arts students and faculty will fill the hallways, studios, theatre and classrooms of the Andrew S. Miller Center for Communication Arts. Classes will be held in this facility beginning in January 2011. A grand opening is scheduled for March 2011.
A peek inside the Center for Communication Arts
When students return to Asbury University in the fall they will be pleased to see that in just a few short weeks, the Andrew S. Miller Center for Communication Arts has transformed from an empty brick veneer shell into a 21st century Mecca for media convergence.