Brian Malone, a College of Charleston junior and Spanish major, has been granted a Critical Languages Scholarship from the U.S. Dept. of State: http://www.clscholarship.org/files/6913/9817/6977/College_of_Charleston.pdf
Category Archives: Student News
National Collegiate Hispanic Honor Society Inducts 10 New Members
On April 3, 2014 at 6:30pm in the Alumni Center of the School of Education, nine students and one faculty member were initiated into the College of Charleston’s Nu Zeta Chapter of Sigma Delta Pi, the National Collegiate Hispanic Honor Society: Lisa Dealmeida, Dan Gary, Olivia Ghiz, Rachel Ellen Harper, Kellane Kornegay, Henry B. Mullin, John H. Wagstaff, Emily Medhus, Stephanie Meier and Professor Gustavo Urdaneta.
Dr. Weyers and Thais Voet Honored in 2014 ExCEL Awards Program
On March 26, 2014, Professor Joseph Weyers was named the 2014 LCWA Outstanding Faculty of the Year and Thais Vote the LCWA Outstanding Student of the Year during the 9th Annual ExCEL Awards Ceremony.
2004 Alumnus Brantley Nicholson Co-Authors Book
Brantley Nicholson, ’04 Spanish, has co-authored the book The Generation of ’72: Latin America’s Forced Global Citizens, published in January 2014 by Editorial A. Contracorriente of North Carolina State University.
Dr. Weyers Enjoys Visit from Academic Magnet AP Spanish Students

On March 21, 2014, Professor Joseph Weyers presented a talk on sociolinguistic issues in the Spanish speaking world to visiting AP Spanish students from Charleston’s Academic Magnet High School. Professor Weyers’ lecture focused on forms of address (tú, vos, usted, vosotros, ustedes), their meaning and use … en español.
Remembering Hannah Albenesius
Hannah Albenesius studied Russian at the College of Charleston for four years, and the Russian faculty watched her grow and mature into a strong and highly motivated young woman through her involvement in the Russian Studies Program. Hannah distinguished herself through her innovative thinking and discipline, and she became one of an elite group of students which any professor is proud to have. Her enthusiasm and excitement for learning were unparalleled; she often pursued material far beyond what is required by syllabi. She was very intelligent and functioned well in an academic setting; her critical thinking and constant engagement helped her to produce unique and insightful work.
There is a saying: “a person is not a jar to be filled, but a torch to be lit.” Hannah was that rewarding light for every educator. The faculty of the Russian program recognized Hannah’s potential from the beginning, and encouraged her to step out of her comfort zone, to develop her strengths and conquer her meekness. Faculty was very proud of Hannah who evolved into an innovative and independent thinker. When she became an officer of the Russian club four years ago, Hannah drew in a strong member-base with her charismatic personality and intellectualism, and she often invited the tightly-knit group of officers to her house for chai and konfeti. She also diversified the club through interdisciplinary activities, including an annual lecture series featuring scholars from the Charleston area and beyond, and she networked with everyone from sports teams to Orthodox churches.
Hannah loved to stop by faculty offices just for a chat; she had an irrepressible sense of humor, and she loved to hear stories that made her laugh. She adored animals, and she is remembered as saying one day that if she had the space, she would adopt every single creature, big and small, in need of a home. Hannah had time and kindness for everyone.
Student Ryan Murphy Earns Bundestag Youth Exchange Fellowship for AY 2014-15
Ryan Murphy, German minor and Biology major, was awarded one of 75 Bundestag Youth Exchange Fellowships for the 2014-15 Academic Year.
Dr. Alberto Veiga’s Book Chapter Published
Professor Alberto Veiga’s book chapter “Voces subalternas: el teatro criollo en el discurso colonial hispanoamericano” has been published in Estudios transatlanticos postcoloniales, III: Imaginario criollo by Ileana Rodriguez and Josebe Martinez (eds.), Anthropos 2014.
See http://www.anthropos-editorial.com/DETALLE/ESTUDIOS-TRANSATLANTICOS-POSTCOLONIALES,-III-PCPU-213
2013 German Graduate Publishes in _Chrestomathy_
2013 German graduate Stephanie Rhodes has published in Chrestomathy, the CofC journal for outstanding undergraduate research. Entitled “Polarized Politics: Fassbinder’s Use of ‘Spiele(n)’ in Die dritte Generation (1979) as an Explanation of Left-wing Terrorism in West Germany,” the article is drawn from Stephanie’s Bachelor’s Essay, written under the supervision of Dr. Nancy Nenno. Stephanie double majored in German and International Business and immediately got a job with a German company upon graduation. Congratulations, Stephanie, on all of your many accomplishments!
http://chrestomathy.cofc.edu/
http://chrestomathy.cofc.edu/
15 Students Initiated into Nat’l Collegiate Hispanic Honor Society
On Thursday, November 21, 2013 at 7:00pm in the Alumni Center of the School of Education, the following 15 students were initiated into the College of Charleston’s Nu Zeta Chapter of Sigma Delta Pi, the National Collegiate Hispanic Honor Society:
Hunter Weston Adams
Adriana Bonasorte
Eric Britton
Emily Lane Brown
Clay Bucher
Alexander Cattran
James Clark
Marisa Graham
Hart Hildebrand
Brian Malone
Devon Meneeley
Jessica Russo
Leah Magdalene Theoharidis
Neil Daniel Robert Turner
Stephen Zimmerman
Those present also recognized the 36th birthday of the Nu Zeta Chapter: on November 21, 1977, the College of Charleston’s chapter was founded by Professor Fleming G. Vinson, Associate Professor of Spanish and Italian, with the initiation of four charter members.