For one weekend, it will be all archaeology, all the time at the College of Charleston. The first Archaeology Month Celebration will include demonstrations by primitive technologists, free artifact identification, lectures, and displays. http://beachcarolina.com/2012/09/26/cofc-hosts-archaeology-event-with-demonstrations-artifact-identification/
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Are you ready to rock…the vote?- WCIV
Ready to rock? The College of Charleston is hosting a ‘Rock the Vote’ event from noon to 2pm outside the Physicians Auditorium by the Cistern on Thursday afternoon. “Aside from the importance of voting for anybody to have your opinions and voices heard, I think especially the college demographic is important because it is their first time,” […]
Past Forward: Why Students Still Want to Get Into ‘Hot’ Colleges- New York Times
Harvey Mudd. The University of Richmond. The College of Charleston. Elon. They may be unfamiliar names to many, but according to Marjorie Hansen Shaevitz, a college admissions counselor and the author of “Admission Possible: The Dare to Be Yourself Guide for Getting Into the Best Colleges,” they are all examples of schools that “have suddenly come […]
Nuovo Cinema Italiano Film Festival brings 13 films and four directors to Charleston- Charleston Post and Courier
The festival, which runs Thursday-Sunday, has become increasingly popular and able to attract more cinematic talent each year, said Giovanna De Luca, festival director and professor of Italian and cinema at the College of Charleston. http://www.charlestonscene.com/article/20120919/CS/120919077/1176/nuovo-cinema-italiano-film-festival-brings-13-films-and-four-directors-to-charleston
Orangeburg Massacre stirs debate 44 years later- USA TODAY
Today, academics, students and others meet in South Carolina for a three-day conference at the College of Charleston. They’ll discuss the black power movement and the legacy of the Orangeburg Massacre. “It’s still a sore spot for people here, when you talk about a massacre of students, how it never reached the level of a […]
More people in way of a ‘new’ Hugo- Charleston Post and Courier
“People are in the way,” said Scott Harris, a College of Charleston geology and environmental geosciences assistant professor who has studied that build-up and coastal “low spots” more prone to flood, overwash, channeling surge and waves from a landfalling hurricane. http://www.postandcourier.com/article/20120921/PC16/120929886/1006/more-people-in-way-of-a-new-hugo
SC coastline more vulnerable 23 years after Hugo- Myrtle Beach Sun News
“It’s a very vulnerable coastline from Little River down,” said Scott Harris, associate professor of geology and environmental geosciences at the College of Charleston geologist who has researched landscape evolution and shoreline dynamics. “The only reason we realize there’s a problem is because people live on the coast.” http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/2012/09/21/3072339/sc-coastline-more-vulnerable-23.html#storylink=misearch
Beyond true grits- Washington Post
In 1986, Taylor opened the store, Hoppin’ John’s, its name a nod to the moniker the budding bookseller had adopted a year earlier when he brought the traditional good-luck dish of rice and beans to a New Year’s Day party. Historian and author Dale Rosengarten, curator at the Addlestone Library at the College of Charleston, […]
Black Power and its impact topic of Avery Center conference- Charleston Post and Courier
The goal is to re-frame black power and demonstrate its sweeping reach, according to Robert Chase, public historian at the College of Charleston’s Avery Research Center for African-American History and Culture and conference co-organizer. For a direct line can be draw between Booker T. Washington, who advocated self-sufficiency, and President Barack Obama, who personifies the […]
Historians, activists ponder role of black power in the past and today at SC conference- AP
In the city where the first shots were fired in a bloody civil war that freed millions of slaves, historians, activists and ordinary folks will discuss the legacy of black power and what it means today. The three-day conference opening Thursday at the College of Charleston’s Avery Research Center for African American studies includes appearances […]