Alumna Is Coming Up Aces
As the youngest division director at her medical center, Elizabeth Seiverling ’01 credits much of her success to her time on the tennis court for CofC.
As the youngest division director at her medical center, Elizabeth Seiverling ’01 credits much of her success to her time on the tennis court for CofC.
What inspires a writer, a musician or a dancer? Some seek inspiration in nature. Others are inspired by places and people. This semester students in the departments of music and theatre and dance found it in an exhibit at the Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art.
The 14th Annual Nuovo Cinema Italiano Film Festival, which is spearheaded by CofC Italian professor Giovanna De Luca, will take place on Nov. 18 and Nov. 19, 2020, at the Charleston Music Hall.
The Campus Preservation Fund, part of the College of Charleston's Drive for the 250th fundraising campaign, seeks to raise $1.3 million to preserve and maintain CofC's historic structures.
The Honors College has been selected as a high-ranking program by the publication 'Inside Honors 2020-2021: Ratings and Reviews of 40 Top Public University Honors Programs.'
The graduate program in Environmental and Sustainability Studies will host the “Gullah/Geechee Freedom Celebration," a livestreamed choreopoem, on Saturday, Oct. 24.
As part of “The College Reads!” program, the College of Charleston will present a virtual evening with Francisco Cantú, author of 'The Line Becomes a River: Dispatches from the Border,' on Thursday, Oct. 22, 2020, via Zoom.
On Saturday, Oct. 10, 2020, four accomplished students from the College of Charleston's Class of 2020 will address their classmates in celebration of their academic achievements in the face of unprecedented times.
Part of the Drive for the 250th, the future Student Success Center at 58 George St. will offer a centralized location for career and civic engagement programs as well as other support services for students.
Nationally syndicated columnist and recipient of the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for Distinguished Commentary Kathleen Parker and historian and founding director of the Center for the Study of Slavery in Charleston Bernard E. Powers will be the featured speakers during the 2020 College of Charleston Spring Commencement ceremonies.