Spring semester class begin today!
We will host two upcoming virtual events to help keep you informed about the College’s ongoing response to the COVID-19 pandemic and our commitment to maintaining high-quality and engaging academic instruction, both in person and online.
- At 5:30 p.m. (EST) on Thursday, Jan. 14, Provost Suzanne Austin and a panel of CofC faculty will conduct a virtual information session for students, parents and families to explain and discuss the online learning modalities we are using this academic year.
This event will highlight the synchronous and asynchronous online learning options as well as the hybrid model, which combines both online and in-person instruction. While this event will not include a live Q&A with the audience, students and parents are encouraged to submit questions in advance via email to covid19@cofc.edu. We will attempt to address the most common questions and concerns. The link to join the Information Session on Online Learning Modalities using the Microsoft Teams Live Event platform is go.cofc.edu/info-session (CofC login credentials are not required).
- At 5:30 p.m. (EST) on Wednesday, Jan. 20, the College will hold a virtual town hall for students, parents and families to provide updates and answer questions related to the COVID-19 pandemic and the spring semester.
We hope you will join this first virtual town hall of 2021 and participate in the live Q&A with our COVID-19 Leadership Team. You may also submit questions in advance of the town hall by sending your questions to covid19@cofc.edu. The link to join the Virtual Town Hall for Students, Parents and Families on the Microsoft Teams Live Event platform is go.cofc.edu/virtual-town-hall-students (CofC login credentials are not required).
As 2020 comes to a close and we look toward what lies ahead, one thing is certain: After this year, the College of Charleston will never be quite the same. With 60 faculty and staff members retiring since May – many of them leaving at the end of December – there will be quite a few familiar faces missing on campus when we return after the winter break.
For the Office of the Provost, we hope you will join us in wishing all the best to our own Beth Murphy, class of 1989, who served the College of Charleston for over 30 years and Cathy Peebles who managed the office since 2007. Although they are leaving big shoes to fill, they’re leaving even bigger legacies – and the foundation they’ve built as our friends, colleagues, teachers and leaders will live on at the College and within the campus community.
To all the following College of Charleston staff and faculty – and to those not listed who recently retired – congratulations on your retirement!
Myrna Barkoot, Custodial Services
Doryjane Birrer, English
Jeri Cabot, Student Affairs
Cheryl Chapman, Registrar
Heather Chipley, Admissions
Sandy Clark, Custodial Services
Maria Colomina-Garrigos, Hispanic Studies
Cheryl Connor, Copy Center
Martine Cuvillier-Hiers, French-Francophone and Italian Studies
Louise Doire, Religious Studies
Wilfred Fields, Building and Equipment Maintenance
Phyllis Gates, Early Childhood Development
Elizabeth Gladden, Custodial Services
Nathaniel Grampus, Building and Equipment Maintenance
Stevie Grampus, Building and Equipment Maintenance
Charlene Grant, Custodial Services
Debra Hammond, President
Mark Hartley, Supply Chain and Information Management
Mary Ann Hartshorn, Teacher Education
John Hull, Studio Art
Patricia Jenkins, Housing – Custodial
Martin Jones, Mathematics
Denis Keyes, Teacher Education
Laura Lageman, Athletics
Mark Landis, Theatre and Dance
Leo Langley, Patriots Point Maintenance
Edward Lawrence, Building and Equipment Maintenance
Gail Long, Internal Auditor
Rhonda Mack, Management and Marketing
Massimo Maggiari, French-Francophone and Italian Studies
Elizabeth Martinez-Gibson, Hispanic Studies
Anthony Martino, Mail Services
Mary Ann May, Health Services
John McBride, Public Safety
William McCoy, Custodial Services
Theodore McDaniel, Building and Equipment Maintenance
Valerie Morris, School of the Arts
James Mueller, Management and Marketing
Beth Murphy, Academic Affairs
Richard Nunan, Philosophy
Homer Pace, Procurement
Robert Perkins, Teacher Education
Cathy Peebles, Academic Affairs
Jose Perales, Public Safety
Deana Richardson, Admissions
Alexander Sanders, Political Science
Mark Sloan, Halsey Institute
Andrew Sobiesuo, International Education
Christopher Starr, Supply Chain and Information Management
Ann Stein, Sociology and Anthropology
Milton Summers, Central Energy
Julie Swanson, Teacher Education
Jeffrey Tomlinson, Chemistry
Neal Tonks, Chemistry
Michelle VanParys, Studio Art
Marlene Williams, Grounds Maintenance
Idee Winfield, Sociology and Anthropology
Robin Zemp, Music
(Bolded names include those faculty and staff within the Division of Academic Affairs)
At the conclusion of this month, Dr. Andrew Sobiesuo, Associate Provost for International Education and Professor of Hispanic Studies, retires from the College of Charleston after an impressive 30-year career. Andrew’s shoes are large ones to fill, but I am pleased to announce that Dr. Mark P. Del Mastro, Associate Provost for Curriculum and Academic Administration, will lead the Center for International Education as Associate Provost for Academic and International Programs beginning on January 1, 2021.
Mark’s involvement with international education is impressive starting with his own study abroad experiences as an undergraduate student in Salamanca, Spain, then later as a graduate student in Madrid. As a faculty member at The Citadel for nearly two decades, he directed multiple study abroad programs in Spain, founded and directed their Maymester program in Quito, Ecuador, and oversaw the establishment of new summer programs in Alcalá de Henares, Spain and Puebla, Mexico. As chair of the Department of Hispanic Studies from 2010-2019, he oversaw and helped bolster our own faculty-led programs in Argentina, Chile and Spain, and he worked directly with Andrew Sobiesuo to restructure the College’s program in Santiago, Chile, which is now hosted at the University of Santiago Chile. Mark’s extensive work with international education for over 30 years will help us build upon the many accomplishments of Dr. Sobiesuo and his able staff in the Center for International Education. Please join me in welcoming Mark to his expanded leadership role on our campus.
Suzanne Austin
Provost and Executive Vice President
Division of Academic Affairs
I am pleased to announce that I have appointed Edward Hart ’88, chair of the Department of Music, as dean of the School of the Arts (SOTA). He succeeds Dean Valerie Morris, who is retiring this year after expertly guiding the school since 1998.
A music faculty member since 1993, Dean Hart has a longstanding commitment to the success of the College and Charleston’s vibrant arts community. He has served as department chair since 2013, demonstrating visionary leadership as well as many administrative and artistic talents.
Dean Hart has also cultivated and enhanced partnerships with many local arts organizations, including the Charleston Symphony, where he serves on the executive board, the Charleston Jazz Orchestra; the Charleston Men’s Chorus; the Charleston Symphony Orchestra Chorus and the Charleston Opera Theatre. He has served on the board of the South Carolina Arts Commission and is a regular guest lecturer for Spoleto Festival USA’s Salon Series.
Dean Hart earned his master’s and doctoral degrees in music from the University of South Carolina and his B.A. in music here at the College of Charleston.
Please join me in welcoming Dean Hart to this new leadership role.
Suzanne Austin
Provost and Executive Vice President
Division of Academic Affairs
Please join us in congratulating our new designated deans for this well-deserved recognition and read below for more information about each of them. Along with our five other deans – Dean Fran Welch, Dean Valerie Morris, Dean Alan Shao, Dean Timothy Johnson and Dean John White – the College is truly fortunate to have such a highly accomplished roster of academic leaders.
Learn More About Our Newest Deans
· Godfrey A. Gibbison, dean of the Graduate School and associate professor of economics, joined the College as dean of the School of Professional Studies in 2013. He created the College’s first fully online degree, the Bachelor of General Studies. A Fulbright scholar, he has published research on household decision-making in developing countries. He also consults with entities such as the World Bank. For more information, visit https://president.cofc.edu/administration/officersanddeans/godfrey-gibbison.php
· Gibbs Knotts, dean of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences and professor of political science, joined the College as chair of that department in 2012. Professor Knotts teaches American politics to undergraduates and graduate students in the public administration program. He has published works on political participation, Southern politics, public administration and the scholarship of teaching and learning. In 2017, he received the College’s Distinguished Research Award. For more information, visit https://president.cofc.edu/administration/officersanddeans/gibbs-knotts.php
· Elizabeth (Beth) Meyer-Bernstein, dean of the Honors College, first joined the College in 2002 and since that time has become the founding co-director and then director (2009) of the neuroscience program and an associate professor of biology in 2009. In 2014, she assumed the roles of director of the Office of Undergraduate Research and Creative Activities and associate dean of the Honors College. She has published extensively about her research of circadian rhythms in a variety of organisms. For more information, visit https://president.cofc.edu/administration/officersanddeans/meyer-bernstein.php
· Sebastian van Delden, dean of the School of Sciences and Mathematics and professor of computer science, joined the College as chair of that department in 2015. In addition to teaching computer science courses, he played an active role in establishing new programs, including systems engineering, electrical engineering, computing in the arts and a master’s degree in data science and analytics. He has published numerous works on robotics and artificial intelligence. For more information, visit https://president.cofc.edu/administration/officersanddeans/sebastian-vandelden.php
CofC Business Hours During Remote Learning Period
The following list of campus offices will be open and staffed during the remote learning period beginning on Tuesday, August 25. As noted below, some offices will maintain normal operating hours from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, but all listed locations will, at a minimum, be open from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. during the remote learning period.
- President’s Office
- Academic Affairs
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- Addlestone Library (Monday–Thursday, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sunday, 12:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.; Saturday, closed for deep cleaning)
- Deans’ offices
- Provost’s Office
- Academic Experience (shared consultation kiosk with Registrar outside Lightsey Center)
- Registrar (shared consultation kiosk with Academic Experience outside Lightsey Center)
- Center for International Education
- Admissions
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- Visitor Center
- Financial Aid
- Veterans Affairs
- Information Technology
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- IT Service Desk (Walk-in at Bell Building 525: Monday through Thursday from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Friday from 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.
- By phone at 843.953.3375 or chat (https://chat.help.cofc.edu) Monday through Friday from 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday from 2 p.m. to 10 p.m.
- Email at itservicedesk@cofc.edu
- Business Affairs
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- Treasurer’s Office
- Campus Services HQ (8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.)
- Copy Center
- Mail Services (8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.)
- Human Resources
- Central Stores (on-site in North Charleston, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.)
- Payroll
- Athletics
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- TD Arena Offices
- Student Affairs (NOTE: Call 843.953.5522 for access to Stern Student Center, if you need to meet with a staff member)
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- Student Affairs administration (8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.)
- Higdon Center
- Career Center
- Multicultural Student Programs and Services (8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.)
- Dean of Students (8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.)
- Student Health Services (8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.)
- Residence Life (8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.)
- Collegiate Recovery (8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.)
- Cougar Pantry (by appointment, 843.953.2291)
- Facilities Management
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- Shop Support (7 a.m. to 5 p.m., 24-hour support for emergencies)
- Public Safety
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- Police and Fire (24-hour support)
Please note: At this time, the vast majority of faculty and staff will still work remotely, to the extent possible.
Employees have already or should expect directives from their supervisors and will receive written follow-up communications from supervisors and/or division heads regarding individual staffing and work schedules.
Please read the announcement from Dr. Hsu on August 24, 2020 for more information.
More than 2,200 new students from around the country and around the world will start their undergraduate careers at the College of Charleston this month as part of the Class of 2024. This cohort includes individuals from 45 U.S. states, districts and territories, as well as international students from a host of countries such as Australia, Denmark and Gambia.
Among this new crowd are seven sets of twins, numerous high school valedictorians and plenty of students with an enterprising spirit. They are seeking preparation for careers in medicine, technology, business and education, as well as myriad of other professions. Some are entrepreneurs. Some are innovators. Some are thought leaders. And all of them are intent on getting a strong background for making their mark on the world.
Read more about the Class of 2024 at https://today.cofc.edu/2020/08/19/model-students-meet-seven-members-of-the-class-of-2024/.
As you are preparing to teach in our new environment, this Resilient Teaching site will offer suggestions of how you can plan for the unexpected, whether that be COVID quarantine or hurricane evacuation. “Resilient teaching” refers to adaptive behaviors used to develop a course for maximum flexibility. The phrase takes its lead from Inside Higher Ed, where researchers have been identifying key strategies that empower teachers to face shifting learning environments.
The College of Charleston’s Liberal Arts and Sciences General Education curriculum serves all students, regardless of major, and assures that students are exposed to a breadth of intellectual inquiry distributed across seven areas: First Year Writing, Foreign Languages, Classical or Modern, History, Humanities, Mathematics/Logic, Natural Science, and Social Sciences. Aside from exposing students to the research topics and methods of the various disciplines, General Education courses engage students in conversations and concepts that are important to responsible citizens of contemporary society. Every course will approach these big ideas differently, in ways appropriate to that discipline and the course context.
Engaging the idea of diversity
The following General Education courses being taught in Fall 2020 intentionally engage with the idea of diversity. The definition, context, and relevant content will change from course to course, but in each one students will discuss diversity as it is understood in that discipline and consider how those ideas can be applied outside the classroom. (See the college catalog for the official course descriptions and for the General Education requirement they fulfill. Read more about these courses at https://academicaffairs.cofc.edu/generaleducation/focus.)
Fall 2020 Offerings
ARTH 101 History of Art: Prehistoric Through Medieval.
This course explores diversity through the study of the visual arts and architecture from the civilizations of the geographical and cultural areas today we know as Europe, Anatolia, the Middle East, and North Africa from the Prehistoric period to the Middle Ages. In this course, students discuss all related aspects which “affect” the art or are affected by art such as religion and religious rituals, politics, daily life requirements, ethnicity, cultural differences, geographical conditions etc. This course will enable the student to identify, analyze and interpret works of art/architecture in a diverse array of traditions.
ARTH 290-04: Special Topics: The Art and Architecture of Mesopotamia and the Ancient Near East
This course investigates the material culture of the civilizations who lived throughout the Eastern Mediterranean and Mesopotamia from the Neolithic period to the Achaemenid Persian Empire. We will investigate how these different peoples interacted with one another over time and in doing so consider questions of identity. How did ancient Near Easterners understand their cultural and ethnic differences? How did these differences influence ancient society and manifest in art and architecture?
CLAS 303/HIST 370
The Greeks, Romans, and Egyptians who inhabited ancient Alexandria followed radically different religious, social, cultural, and economic practices, yet were bound together by their identification as “Alexandrians.” Was this just a geographical description, or did it mean something special to be “Alexandrian”? This course examines relationships and intersections of Alexandria’s communities, whose interactions varied from peaceful to tense to openly violent, and explores the ways in which this diverse community forged a sense of shared identity.
DANC 331: History of Western Dance
This course focuses not just on dance history, but prompts larger conversations about gender disparity in the dance world, sexual harassment and systemic abuses of power, issues of racial and class inequality in opportunities for dance training and performances, and how certain dances reinforces these ideas. These issues have existed since the beginnings of western dance and unfortunately still continue to this day.
ENGL 290: Illness Narratives
Illness does not exist in a vacuum, so factors like neurodiversity, race, ethnicity, sexuality, and gender are important to consider when we read stories about mental or physical dis-ease. Some important readings include Jenny Lawson’s Furiously Happy (a book about depression and anxiety), Susan Nussbaum’s Good Kings, Bad Kings, (about disability and also sexuality), and The Sprit Catches You and You Fall Down, about ethnicity and cultural competence. We also will be working with diverse members of our community as we hear the stories of hospice patients.
HONS 175 – 01 Approaches to Religion: Making Believe and Making Belief in the Study of Religion
This honors course introduces students to the academic study of religion as a social-cultural phenomenon. Focusing primarily on analytical and methodological approaches drawn from the discipline of Performance Studies, we examine the central importance of embodied practices (rituals, microrituals, habits, comportments) for the development of “religious” consciousness. We examine historical and ethnographic accounts drawn from diverse cultural contexts including: Southeast Asian Buddhism, Euro-American Protestantism, and Haitian Vodou in order to illuminate the various ways that humans make sense of the cosmos.
LACS 101: Introduction to Latin American and Caribbean Studies
The main student learning outcome for this course is for students to demonstrate an understanding of the diversity and complexity of the Latin American and/or Caribbean experiences as well as look at the Latino experience in the United States. The course debunks the myths about the region perpetuated by the United States and students ideally come to understand the region as a diverse, complex, rich, and fascinating region of study.
LTPO 270: Cultural Studies Through Film
All films watched in this class require a cultural component. Students read and learn about the geographic, historic, social, and political contextual background of each film, plus beliefs, knowledge, rituals, morals, habits, traditions, manners, customs. We discuss these issues and how the film director examines a subject through their films. Students discuss and also compare with the same themes/topics in the US. We examine diversity in the sense of social inequality, internal migration, race, and gender.
MEDH 200: Introduction to Medical Humanities
The culture of medicine (and of most healthcare) has grown to be white and patriarchal; we question this construction through our unit in philosophy (what do people define as illness? How do race, culture, and gender determine this?), Culture, Race, Gender, and Sexuality. We also write illness narratives that are framed around issues of race, SES, culture, or gender, and we write an EHRAF paper asking students to use a cultural anthropology database.
PHIL 206: Topics in Law & Morality: Lesbian, Gay, & Transgender Rights
Examines the gap between cultural aspirations some of us have concerning civil and human rights in two closely intertwined (but distinct) areas—gender identity & sexual identity—and the history and current cultural reality of existing legal institutions and practices in this area.
PSYC 103: Introduction to Psychological Science
How do human beings differ from each other, and from other animals? Do people from different cultures perceive the world in different ways? How do different social and cultural groups form? How do humans develop prejudices against these groups? What is neurodiversity? Questions like these are at the heart of psychological science, and each PSYC 103 section will touch on a subset of them.
RELS 101-01: Approaches to Religion: Making Believe and Making Belief in the Study of Religion
This course introduces students to the academic study of religion as a social-cultural phenomenon. Focusing primarily on analytical and methodological approaches drawn from the discipline of Performance Studies, we examine the central importance of embodied practices (rituals, microrituals, habits, comportments) for the development of “religious” consciousness. We examine historical and ethnographic accounts drawn from diverse cultural contexts including: Southeast Asian Buddhism, Euro-American Protestantism, and Haitian Vodou in order to illuminate the various ways that humans make sense of the cosmos.
RELS 105: Introduction to World Religions
is an introduction to the study of religion and of the world’s major religious traditions including Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Our study will include historical development, sacred text, ritual, and concepts of the divine. Students will, 1) learn a critical approach to the study of religion, 2) gain a general knowledge of each of the world’s major religions, 3) ‘cross over’ to the cultural worldview of others, 4) develop greater empathy and appreciation for these cultures.
RELS 120.01/02: Religion, Art, and Culture
“Religion, Art, and Culture,” which has as its subtitle: “Searching for the Sacred, the Strange, and the Substance of Faith in the South.” This course is cross-listed as SOST 175 “Religions in the US South.” The main theme of “searching for the sacred and the strange” takes us away from mainstream Christianity to explore the religiosity and aesthetic expression of socially marginalized individuals, whose visionary experiences inspire their creation of religious art, music, and food. The course features three different social sites and social groups: white rural Southern Evangelical Christian “outsider” artists; then we move to New Orleans, the birthplace of jazz, where we examine the relationship between African religions, voodoo, jazz funerals, and Mardi Gras Indians; and finally, we return to Charleston to examine the African American Gullah-Geechee tradition of communicating with the dead and African ancestors through visions, dreams, stories, sweetgrass basketry, and spirituals. One of the course goals is to gain appreciation for the diversity of Southern subcultures and peoples, their shared humanity and creativity, especially among eccentric “outsiders”: artists, storytellers, musicians and performers.
SPAN 320: Introduction to Textual Analysis
In this course, which is an introduction to literature from Spain and Latin America, students engage with and explore diversity through their study of a variety of literary texts which showcase different cultural norms and practices, linguistic varieties, gender and sexual diversities, as well as raise awareness of issues faced by marginalized communities and disadvantaged groups.
Span 333.01: Topics in Hispanic Cultures: Exploring Iberian Cultures: The Foundations of Spain
Multicultural awareness, religious tolerance, and the ability to see the world through diverse viewpoints are of critical importance for citizens of the 21st century. Spain provides a unique test case for examining these issues due to its regional diversity and the religious pluralism that came about as Christians, Jews, and Muslims coexisted in the Iberian Peninsula for more than seven centuries. How can the legacy of convivencia (or living together) and the cultural hybridity among Iberia’s diverse groups help us understand current discourses in multiculturalism, political fragmentation, and religious tolerance in 21st-century America and Spain? This course will allow you a better understanding of Iberian art, geographical and regional diversity, discourses of inclusion and some of the ways that certain citizens get excluded or marginalized by official discourses.
THTR 310: Theatre History Origins to 1750
covers theatrical history and dramatic literature from theatre’s origins in African storytelling traditions through Age of Enlightenment and its accompanying spread of colonialism during the early seventeenth century. Over 1/3 of the theatre and performance examples are drawn from either works by women or non-European traditions (or both!). Throughout the course, students are encouraged to interrogate the canon and propose alternative historiographical questions through a culminating research project.
THTR 321: Children’s Theatre
This course opens up the world of theatre written for children onstage and in the audience. The plays and musicals studied include stories from Native American, African American, and Cajun Black Magic culture along with strong female protagonists. We will discuss how these plays reflect the culture of their origin and introduce children to diverse voices. Playwriting, acting, directing, design and technical theatre is explored throughout the course through practical learning experiences that are ”non-theatre major friendly,” but are still very useful for theatre majors.
WGST200: Introduction to Women’s and Gender Studies
Introduction to Women’s and Gender Studies engages with issues related to diversity, equity, inclusion and social justice through readings, course activities, and assignments. Students can expect to develop a deeper understanding of how historical and current societies are organized by gender as well as by race, ethnicity, nationality, sexual orientation, social class, (dis)ability and other social categories. Students also will explore how individual identities and experiences are shaped by these categories and the various hierarchies associated with them. As an interdisciplinary course, students can expect to also engage with a diversity of approaches, perspectives, and disciplinary conventions as they explore a wide range of topics.
HONS 226 Honors Colloquium: Foundations of Western Civilization Pre-Modern History
All honors colloquia are required to focus on a central and enduring question. For this course, that question is: what are the ideas that shaped Western identity in the pre-modern world? This course-wide theme also envelopes a history specific one. The vital reason that a knowledge of history is key to all educated voters in a democracy is that people utilize the past: they use it to describe themselves and people like them as good, and individuals different from them as bad. The class will provide specific examples of this process.
As the College of Charleston prepares to resume on-campus classes for the fall 2020 semester, the Back on the Bricks website will serve as the official information resource for the university community. Due to the fluid nature of the COVID-19 pandemic, this website will be updated regularly as the College adjusts to evolving conditions and to updated guidance from local, state and federal authorities, which may include Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (SCDHEC) and others.
The components of this plan, including Housing, Academics, Campus Life and more, were developed in consultation with students, faculty, staff, deans, chairs, senior administrators, parents, trustees, alumni, health professionals, community members and other stakeholders.
While the College recognizes that this unprecedented worldwide event presents enormous challenges to our academic mission, it also provides incredible opportunities to unite our campus community around common goals and to prepare our students for obstacles they will face in their lives and careers after graduation. One of the defining hallmarks of the liberal arts education the College is known for is adaptability. The broad foundational knowledge that we impart across our curriculum is ideally suited for extraordinary times like these.
Throughout its 250-year history, the College has survived wars, hurricanes, financial calamities and other great challenges. Eventually, we will add the COVID-19 pandemic to the list of challenges we have overcome. And we will do it together, as one family, as Cougars.