College of Charleston BOT Meeting
Meeting will be October 18-19, 2012
Meeting will be October 18-19, 2012
GIS and supply chain management professors will work with students to develop a real-time system.
Folds-Bennett, current associate dean, will begin her term as dean on January 1, 2013.
Meacham to discuss "The Media’s Secret Bias: Liberals, Conservatives, and the Truth about the News”.
Alix Generous never expected to be presenting research at a United Nations convention, at least not as a sophomore at the College of Charleston. Then again, she never expected to discover a new way to deal with coral reef deterioration, either. Yet on Wednesday, she'll be presenting original research at the U.N. Convention on Biological
Researchers at the College of Charleston and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory have recently completed a study concerning the fate of a newly discovered gas cloud that soon will be devoured by a supermassive black hole that resides at the center of the Milky Way galaxy. The gas cloud, known as G2, is expected to pass
An interview with College of Charleston students Allison Sullivan and POLI major James Smith about the upcoming race. They appear at the 35 minute mark of the program from 03/10/2012. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00yhnxj
By Jack Bass, College of Charleston Maybe the Obama campaign needs to bring Bill Clinton back for another lesson in Arithmetic. When Steve Croft on CBS’s 60 Minutes confronted President Obama Sunday a week ago about an unemployment rate of more than eight percent, he got a stumbling response. Bass is author or co-author of
Ever wonder what would happen to a giant gas cloud if it moved close to a massive black hole? Maybe not, but researchers at the College of Charleston say considering questions like that could lead to a greater understanding of how the universe works. Recently, CofC scientists partnered with researchers at the Lawrence Livermore National
A who’s who of business, including the CEO of aerospace giant Boeing Co., is descending on the College of Charleston campus this morning to talk about the future of South Carolina’s economy and creating new jobs. Boeing chief Jim McNerney, whose company employs more than 6,000 workers at its 787 Dreamliner factories in North Charleston,