26 03, 2015

Organized Chaos

By |2020-01-16T09:49:56-05:00March 26, 2015|Alumni, College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on Organized Chaos

“Legacy just means old,” assistant Professor of Computer Science James Bowring ’00 says in his sunlit office overlooking the Charleston Harbor in the College’s new space at Harbor Walk. It’s the office he was packing to move into when he stumbled upon a September 1965 article in Computers and Automation magazine featuring a piece of

26 03, 2015

Right as Rain

By |2015-03-26T10:29:32-04:00March 26, 2015|College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on Right as Rain

Other than, possibly, farmers, Mike Larsen might be the only person in Charleston who cheers when it rains. That may be putting it too strongly, but Larsen does admit he tends to get “less depressed” than the average person during wet weather. That’s because, for Larsen, precipitation means progress, and that makes him happy. “It

26 03, 2015

Life of the Party

By |2020-01-16T09:50:00-05:00March 26, 2015|Alumni, College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on Life of the Party

New buildings go up, faculty members retire, generations of students come and go, but some things never change: the charm and enchantment of the Cistern Yard, the striking stateliness of Randolph Hall and, of course, the College’s curious knack for throwing a good party. A Charleston Affair – the College’s annual gala celebrating seniors and

26 03, 2015

Figure of Speech

By |2020-01-16T09:50:06-05:00March 26, 2015|Alumni, College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on Figure of Speech

Carefully arranged on an end table just below a window in the office of President Glenn McConnell ’69, a small gold medal about the size of a penny glistens in the late afternoon sun. McConnell picks up the medal. It is attached to one end of a pocketwatch chain that belonged to McConnell’s grandfather. Both

26 03, 2015

Strike a Match

By |2020-01-16T09:50:11-05:00March 26, 2015|Alumni, College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on Strike a Match

She is here for the men. She makes that unmistakably clear. She goes straight in and makes her move without hesitation. And her approach works: She’s already scored numbers from five eligible bachelors – all of them unabashedly intrigued by what she has to offer. She’s straightforward, unapologetic and confident. And she’s starting to get

26 03, 2015

As the Story Unfolds

By |2020-01-16T09:50:16-05:00March 26, 2015|Alumni, College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on As the Story Unfolds

She didn’t think they’d go for it. The concept was too out there, too abstract, too risky. Perhaps the short film that Megan Gural Oepen ’00 had pitched would be a better fit for some hip, edgy startup. But the client for this job was Chick-fil-A, a stalwart of American business known for its traditional

26 03, 2015

McArchivist

By |2020-01-16T09:50:21-05:00March 26, 2015|Alumni, College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on McArchivist

Forgive Jessica Farrell ’08 if her work makes her hungry. As a corporate archivist for McDonald’s, Farrell spends her days sorting through all sorts of documents, television commercials and historical artifacts related to the Golden Arches, helping catalog the paraphernalia in climate-controlled storage and answer questions from colleagues. Questions like: How much lettuce was placed

26 03, 2015

Seeing the Future

By |2015-03-26T10:19:07-04:00March 26, 2015|College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on Seeing the Future

When you’ve traveled around the world and seen the things Amy Brown has seen – grinding poverty in war-torn Armenia, orphans in Central Africa whose parents died of AIDS, villagers in Cambodia who measure wealth by pots of rice – you gain some perspective on the challenges faced by troubled youth and their families back

26 03, 2015

A Work of Nurture

By |2020-01-16T09:50:25-05:00March 26, 2015|Alumni, College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on A Work of Nurture

Eight-year-old Laura Funk Zucker ’06 (M.A.T.) turned around to see her parents, but the door to the hallway where they’d just kissed her goodbye was closed. She looked around in a panic. Who are these people? Why aren’t they talking to me? Where is my doctor? Why is this stranger holding a mask to my

26 03, 2015

Revolutionary Hero

By |2019-04-16T15:10:06-04:00March 26, 2015|College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on Revolutionary Hero

Half the world over, Harry Huge (pronounced Huge-ee) is a hero. That’s what they call him in the hills of West Virginia, where the high-powered lawyer fought to protect coal miners and their families from abusive union leadership and polluting coal companies. A hero is how he is regarded in South Carolina, where he once